King LearCommercial Press, 1922 - 385 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 27
Page 28
... bear , Our potency made good , take thy reward . Five days we do allot thee , for provision . To shield thee from disasters of the world , And on the sixth to turn thy hated back Upon our kingdom . If on the tenth day following Thy ...
... bear , Our potency made good , take thy reward . Five days we do allot thee , for provision . To shield thee from disasters of the world , And on the sixth to turn thy hated back Upon our kingdom . If on the tenth day following Thy ...
Page 33
William Shakespeare. curse . Cordelia not only lacks a worthy dower ; she also bears a father's Whoever marries her must expect to incur the hatred of the angry king . In such circumstances Burgundy cannot make up his mind to marry her ...
William Shakespeare. curse . Cordelia not only lacks a worthy dower ; she also bears a father's Whoever marries her must expect to incur the hatred of the angry king . In such circumstances Burgundy cannot make up his mind to marry her ...
Page 46
... bears , this last surrender of his will . but offend us . Regan . We shall further think of it . Goneril . We must do something , and i ' th ' heat . 310 ( Exeunt . ) 302. unconstant : inconstant , capricious . like : likely . 304 ...
... bears , this last surrender of his will . but offend us . Regan . We shall further think of it . Goneril . We must do something , and i ' th ' heat . 310 ( Exeunt . ) 302. unconstant : inconstant , capricious . like : likely . 304 ...
Page 65
... disposition : lustfulness . on : to . 130. dragon's tail : The dragon is a constellation of stars , as is also Ursa Major , or the Great Bear . Pat he comes like the catastrophe of the old comedy Scene II . 65 KING LEAR.
... disposition : lustfulness . on : to . 130. dragon's tail : The dragon is a constellation of stars , as is also Ursa Major , or the Great Bear . Pat he comes like the catastrophe of the old comedy Scene II . 65 KING LEAR.
Page 81
... bear to think ; and to it he would forbid all reference . All things now tend to increase his petulance . Upon the re - entrance of Oswald , Lear , who feels that he has but a moment ago impressed a keen - witted stranger with the ...
... bear to think ; and to it he would forbid all reference . All things now tend to increase his petulance . Upon the re - entrance of Oswald , Lear , who feels that he has but a moment ago impressed a keen - witted stranger with the ...
Other editions - View all
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