King LearCommercial Press, 1922 - 385 pages |
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Page iv
... follows : ( 1 ) Female lines - possessing one or two unaccented syllables after the tenth . ( 2 ) Accented odd syllables - rare in the case of the third and ninth and never in succession . ( 3 ) Apparently superfluous syllables , and ...
... follows : ( 1 ) Female lines - possessing one or two unaccented syllables after the tenth . ( 2 ) Accented odd syllables - rare in the case of the third and ninth and never in succession . ( 3 ) Apparently superfluous syllables , and ...
Page v
... follows the Folio for the most part , presenting in the Appendix those lines which appear in the Quartos only . Two stories blend in Shakespeare's King Lear , the secondary one , concerning Gloucester , having been suggested by the ...
... follows the Folio for the most part , presenting in the Appendix those lines which appear in the Quartos only . Two stories blend in Shakespeare's King Lear , the secondary one , concerning Gloucester , having been suggested by the ...
Page 24
... follow'd , As my great patron thought on in my prayers , — Lear . The bow is bent and drawn ; make from the shaft . Kent . Let it fall rather , though the fork invade The region of my heart ! Be Kent unmannerly , When Lear is mad . What ...
... follow'd , As my great patron thought on in my prayers , — Lear . The bow is bent and drawn ; make from the shaft . Kent . Let it fall rather , though the fork invade The region of my heart ! Be Kent unmannerly , When Lear is mad . What ...
Page 49
William Shakespeare. Scene II . This scene opens the second day , the morning follow- ing the first scene . Edmund and his father returned from the Palace after Lear's abdication and passionate outbreak . Edmund , though apparently not ...
William Shakespeare. Scene II . This scene opens the second day , the morning follow- ing the first scene . Edmund and his father returned from the Palace after Lear's abdication and passionate outbreak . Edmund , though apparently not ...
Page 62
... follow us disquietly to our graves . Find out this villain , Edmund ; it shall lose thee nothing ; do it carefully . 115 And the noble and true - hearted Kent offence , honesty ! ' T is strange . banished ! his ( Exil . ) 105. late ...
... follow us disquietly to our graves . Find out this villain , Edmund ; it shall lose thee nothing ; do it carefully . 115 And the noble and true - hearted Kent offence , honesty ! ' T is strange . banished ! his ( Exil . ) 105. late ...
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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