King LearLoyola University Press, 1930 - 279 pages |
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Page 129
... messenger . 130 CORNWALL . Fetch forth the stocks ! As I have life and honor , There shall he sit till noon . REGAN . Till noon ! till night , my lord ; and all night too . 134 KENT . Why , madam , if I were your father's dog , You ...
... messenger . 130 CORNWALL . Fetch forth the stocks ! As I have life and honor , There shall he sit till noon . REGAN . Till noon ! till night , my lord ; and all night too . 134 KENT . Why , madam , if I were your father's dog , You ...
Page 130
... messenger , should see that messenger restrained in such a way as this . 147 more worse . A double comparative . 153 rubbed : rubbed the wrong way , crossed . 154 I have .... hard : I have been awake at night , and have traveled hard ...
... messenger , should see that messenger restrained in such a way as this . 147 more worse . A double comparative . 153 rubbed : rubbed the wrong way , crossed . 154 I have .... hard : I have been awake at night , and have traveled hard ...
Page 134
... messenger . GENTLEMAN . As I learned , The night before there was no purpose in them Of this remove . KENT . LEAR . Ha ! Hail to thee , noble master ! Makest thou this shame thy pastime ? KENT . 5 No , my lord . FOOL . Ha , ha ; he ...
... messenger . GENTLEMAN . As I learned , The night before there was no purpose in them Of this remove . KENT . LEAR . Ha ! Hail to thee , noble master ! Makest thou this shame thy pastime ? KENT . 5 No , my lord . FOOL . Ha , ha ; he ...
Contents
BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE | 7 |
THE STORY OF KING LEAR | 14 |
COMMENTS ON KING LEAR | 20 |
Copyright | |
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Alack ALBANY Anne Hathaway arms attasked bear Bedlam better brother Burgundy cause characters Child Rowland comes Cordelia CORNWALL curse daugh daughters dear death decasyllable Dover Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Burgundy Duke of Cornwall duty Earl of Gloucester Edmund evil Exeunt Exit eyes father favor fear feel follow FOOL fortune foul fiend GENTLEMAN give GLOUCESTER'S castle gods Goneril and Regan grace hate hath hear heart heaven honor husband KENT Kent's King Lear King of France kingdom knave lady Lear's Lines live look lord madam master Merchant of Venice MESSENGER mind nature night noble nuncle OSWALD pity play Poet poor pray thee Prithee SCENE seek servant Shakespeare Show sister slave speak speech stand storm suffering sword tell there's thine things thou art thought tragedy traitor trumpet unnatural villain virtue wicked William Shakespeare words