King LearCassell & Company, 1908 - 195 pages |
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Page 5
William Shakespeare. KING LEAR 1908 CASSELL & CO LTD LONDON , PARIS . NEW YORK TORONTO & MELBOURNE CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTION TEXT OF PLAY 9 17 NOTES 185. K SHAKESPEARE.
William Shakespeare. KING LEAR 1908 CASSELL & CO LTD LONDON , PARIS . NEW YORK TORONTO & MELBOURNE CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTION TEXT OF PLAY 9 17 NOTES 185. K SHAKESPEARE.
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William Shakespeare. CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTION TEXT OF PLAY 9 17 NOTES 185 • MAP ( SHOWING SCENE OF PLAY ) . 190 GLOSSARY 191 · INTRODUCTION BY F. J. FURNIVALL , M.A. , Ph.D. , 7 NOV 15 1605.
William Shakespeare. CONTENTS PAGE INTRODUCTION TEXT OF PLAY 9 17 NOTES 185 • MAP ( SHOWING SCENE OF PLAY ) . 190 GLOSSARY 191 · INTRODUCTION BY F. J. FURNIVALL , M.A. , Ph.D. , 7 NOV 15 1605.
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... play resembles a stormy night . The first scene is like a wild sunset , grand and awful , with gusts of wind and mutterings of thunder , pre- saging the coming storm . Then comes a furious tempest of crime and madness , through which we ...
... play resembles a stormy night . The first scene is like a wild sunset , grand and awful , with gusts of wind and mutterings of thunder , pre- saging the coming storm . Then comes a furious tempest of crime and madness , through which we ...
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... play too . It shows the Keltic passion , misjudgment , and super- stition , as in Glendower of 1 Henry IV . , in ... play , has seen the day that with " this good sword " he'd have made his way through twenty times their stop , and Lear ...
... play too . It shows the Keltic passion , misjudgment , and super- stition , as in Glendower of 1 Henry IV . , in ... play , has seen the day that with " this good sword " he'd have made his way through twenty times their stop , and Lear ...
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... play , I have no time to speak . And while content that others should claim Lear as Shakspere's greatest work , for its diversity and contrast of char- acter , its mixing the storms of nature with the passions of man1 , I must yet claim ...
... play , I have no time to speak . And while content that others should claim Lear as Shakspere's greatest work , for its diversity and contrast of char- acter , its mixing the storms of nature with the passions of man1 , I must yet claim ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack ALBANY arms art thou Attasked Bedlam brother Burgundy canst Child Rowland Cordelia Corn dead dear dost thou doth Dover duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloster Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter GLOSTER Enter KENT Enter LEAR Exeunt LEAR eyes father fear follow Fool fortune foul fiend France Gent gentleman Gesta Romanorum give GLOSTER'S Castle Enter gods GONERIL grace hath hear heart heavens hither honour KING LEAR knave lady Layamon letter look lord Macbeth madam man's master nature never night noble nuncle o'er offend OSWALD pity poor Poor Tom Pr'ythee pray Re-enter Regan SCENE Servants Shakspere shame Sir George Trevelyan sirrah sister slave sorrow speak stand storm sword tell thee there's thine thou art thou dost thou hast traitor trumpet villain wind wretch