King LearCommercial Press, 1922 - 385 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 28
... course in a country new . 168. recreant : faithless wretch . 170. That : seeing that . row : the promised division of the kingdom , ( Exit . ) 185 In line 173 Lear utters a condemning self - characterization 28 Act I. KING LEAR.
... course in a country new . 168. recreant : faithless wretch . 170. That : seeing that . row : the promised division of the kingdom , ( Exit . ) 185 In line 173 Lear utters a condemning self - characterization 28 Act I. KING LEAR.
Page 70
... ( Exit Edgar . ) . A credulous father , and a brother noble , Whose nature is so far from doing harms That he suspects none ; on whose foolish honesty My practices ride easy . I see the business . Let me , if not by birth , have lands by ...
... ( Exit Edgar . ) . A credulous father , and a brother noble , Whose nature is so far from doing harms That he suspects none ; on whose foolish honesty My practices ride easy . I see the business . Let me , if not by birth , have lands by ...
Page 74
... ( Exit an attendant . ) How now ! what art thou ? Kent . A man , Lear . with us ? sir . What dost thou profess ? What wouldst thou 5- 10 Kent . I do profess to be no less than I seem ; to serve him truly that will put me in trust ; to ...
... ( Exit an attendant . ) How now ! what art thou ? Kent . A man , Lear . with us ? sir . What dost thou profess ? What wouldst thou 5- 10 Kent . I do profess to be no less than I seem ; to serve him truly that will put me in trust ; to ...
Page 76
... I like thee no worse after dinner , I will not part from thee yet . Dinner , ho , dinner ! Where's my knave ? my Fool ? Go you , and call my Fool hither . 45 ( Exit an Attendant . ) A man is known by his friends ; and it 76 Act I. KING ...
... I like thee no worse after dinner , I will not part from thee yet . Dinner , ho , dinner ! Where's my knave ? my Fool ? Go you , and call my Fool hither . 45 ( Exit an Attendant . ) A man is known by his friends ; and it 76 Act I. KING ...
Page 78
... ( Exit a Knight . ) ( Exit . ) 50 Where's my Fool , ho ? I think the world's asleep . Re - enter Knight . How now ! where ' s that mongrel ? Knight . He says , my lord , your daughter is not 55 well . Lear . Why came not the slave back to ...
... ( Exit a Knight . ) ( Exit . ) 50 Where's my Fool , ho ? I think the world's asleep . Re - enter Knight . How now ! where ' s that mongrel ? Knight . He says , my lord , your daughter is not 55 well . Lear . Why came not the slave back to ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack Albany Albany's anger Appendix art thou Bedlam beggar Burgundy character child Child Rowland comes Cordelia Cornwall Cornwall's curse daughters death Dover duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall duty Earl of Gloucester Edgar Edmund emotion endure evil Exeunt Exit eyes father favour fear feels filial folio follow Fool foolish fortune foul fiend France Gentleman give Gloucester Gloucester's castle gods Goneril and Regan grace hast hath heart hence Hendiadys honour husband insane Kent Kent's King Lear knave Lear's letter lord loyalty madam madness master meaning Messenger mind nature never night noble nuncle Oswald passion pelican daughters pity play poison'd poor Poor Tom pray Prithee Quarto Scene scorn seek self-control sense servant Shakespeare sister speak spirit storm suffering sympathy thee thine thing thought Topics for consideration traitor trumpet unnatural villain weakness words