King LearLoyola University Press, 1930 - 279 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 41
Page 76
... eyes 248 their . Refers to Lear and the Duke of Burgundy . 252 waterish : watery ; hence weak , thin . Used in con ... eyes : eyes washed or wet with tears . 19 terrible : apparently terrified . 24 o'er - read 76 ACT I LOYOLA ...
... eyes 248 their . Refers to Lear and the Duke of Burgundy . 252 waterish : watery ; hence weak , thin . Used in con ... eyes : eyes washed or wet with tears . 19 terrible : apparently terrified . 24 o'er - read 76 ACT I LOYOLA ...
Page 174
... eyes at trial : " Do you want eyes to gaze at and admire you during trial , madam ? The fiends are there to serve your purpose " ( Clarke ) . 25 bourn : boundary ; in this case a stream . The lines are from an old song : Come over the ...
... eyes at trial : " Do you want eyes to gaze at and admire you during trial , madam ? The fiends are there to serve your purpose " ( Clarke ) . 25 bourn : boundary ; in this case a stream . The lines are from an old song : Come over the ...
Page 213
... eyes well enough . Dost thou squiny at me ? No , do thy worst , blind Cupid ; I'll not love . Read thou this ... eyes ? LEAR . O ho , are you there with me ? No eyes in your head , nor no money in your purse ? Your eyes are in a ...
... eyes well enough . Dost thou squiny at me ? No , do thy worst , blind Cupid ; I'll not love . Read thou this ... eyes ? LEAR . O ho , are you there with me ? No eyes in your head , nor no money in your purse ? Your eyes are in a ...
Contents
BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE | 7 |
THE STORY OF KING LEAR | 14 |
COMMENTS ON KING LEAR | 20 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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