King LearMacmillan, 1900 |
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Page 5
... father ) ; ii . 2. 148- 152 ( His fault ... are punish'd with ) ; iii . 1. 7-15 ( tears . take all ) ; 30-42 ( But , true .. to you ) ; iii . 6. 17-59 ( The foul ' scape ) ; iv . 2. 31-50 ( I fear . . . deep ) ; iv . 3. ; v . I. 23-28 ...
... father ) ; ii . 2. 148- 152 ( His fault ... are punish'd with ) ; iii . 1. 7-15 ( tears . take all ) ; 30-42 ( But , true .. to you ) ; iii . 6. 17-59 ( The foul ' scape ) ; iv . 2. 31-50 ( I fear . . . deep ) ; iv . 3. ; v . I. 23-28 ...
Page 7
... father's fate and her own . Spenser , a little later , epitomised the story in half a dozen stanzas of the Faerie Queene ( bk . ii . c . x . 27-32 ) . Finally , in 1592-3 , an unknown hand dramatised it as ' The Chronicle Historie of ...
... father's fate and her own . Spenser , a little later , epitomised the story in half a dozen stanzas of the Faerie Queene ( bk . ii . c . x . 27-32 ) . Finally , in 1592-3 , an unknown hand dramatised it as ' The Chronicle Historie of ...
Page 8
... father , exhibits several shades of bluntness , from the brutal ' So much as you have , so much you are worth , and so much I love you , and no more ' of Geoffrey , to the discreet declaration in the Mirror for Magistrates ' version ...
... father , exhibits several shades of bluntness , from the brutal ' So much as you have , so much you are worth , and so much I love you , and no more ' of Geoffrey , to the discreet declaration in the Mirror for Magistrates ' version ...
Page 11
... father . Such a character was already hinted in the Leir of the legend . All these germs of tragic un- reason , which the painstaking and matter - of - fact older playwright did his best to eliminate , are expanded and vitalised in the ...
... father . Such a character was already hinted in the Leir of the legend . All these germs of tragic un- reason , which the painstaking and matter - of - fact older playwright did his best to eliminate , are expanded and vitalised in the ...
Page 19
... father found ; A love that makes breath poor and speech unable ; Beyond all manner of so much I love you . Cor . [ Aside ] What shall Cordelia do ? Love , and be silent . Lear . Of all these bounds , even from this line to this , 40 ...
... father found ; A love that makes breath poor and speech unable ; Beyond all manner of so much I love you . Cor . [ Aside ] What shall Cordelia do ? Love , and be silent . Lear . Of all these bounds , even from this line to this , 40 ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack Albany arms art thou brother Burgundy C. H. HERFORD Child Rowland Cordeilla Cordelia Corn Cornwall daughters dear death Doct Dost thou doth Dover duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter GLOUCESTER Enter KENT Exeunt eyes farewell father Flibbertigibbet follow fortune foul fiend France Gent gentleman give Gloster Glou Gloucester's castle gods Goneril grace hand hath hear heart heavens hither honour horse I'ld Julius Cæsar King Lear kingdom knave lady Lear's Leir letter look lord madam master Mirror for Magistrates nature never night noble nuncle o'er Omitted in Ff pelican daughters pity poor Poor Tom pray Prithee Re-enter Regan SCENE Servants Shakespeare sirrah sister slave speak stand storm sword tell thee there's thine thing thou art thou dost thou hast traitor trumpet villain wind