King LearSterling Publishers Private Limited, 1984 - 246 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 32
Page xx
... Fortune , that to wonder Hoists men aloft , is a cleere euidence Of a vaunt - curring blow the Fates have giuen To his forst state ; swift Lightning blindes his ... Fortune ' , and he proceeds virtually to identify fortune XX KING LEAR.
... Fortune , that to wonder Hoists men aloft , is a cleere euidence Of a vaunt - curring blow the Fates have giuen To his forst state ; swift Lightning blindes his ... Fortune ' , and he proceeds virtually to identify fortune XX KING LEAR.
Page xxii
... fortune in Strachey's sonnet do not particularly resemble the allegory of fortune in Timon . The word confluence , used once in Timon , is also to be found in Florio's translation of Montaigne , from which Shakespeare may have taken it ...
... fortune in Strachey's sonnet do not particularly resemble the allegory of fortune in Timon . The word confluence , used once in Timon , is also to be found in Florio's translation of Montaigne , from which Shakespeare may have taken it ...
Page 137
... Fortune Stands still in esperance , lives not in fear : The lamentable change is from the best ; The worst returns ... Fortune ] a thing most dejected of Fortune . Shakespeare often transposes the adjective in this way . dejected ...
... Fortune Stands still in esperance , lives not in fear : The lamentable change is from the best ; The worst returns ... Fortune ] a thing most dejected of Fortune . Shakespeare often transposes the adjective in this way . dejected ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Albany Appendix argues bastard Capell cites conj Cordelia Corn Cornwall Cotgrave Craig daughters death dost doth Dover Duke Duthie Edgar edited Edmund emendation Enter Exeunt Exit eyes F reading father Florio Fool Fortune Gent give Glou Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril Goneril and Regan Greg Harsnett hast hath haue heart Holinshed hyphened Jennens Johnson Kent King Lear Kittredge knave Lear's Leir letter lines London Prodigal Lord loue Madam Malone means Mirror for Magistrates Montaigne nature neuer night noble Nuncle Oswald passage Perrett phrase play poor Pope pray Q corr Q uncorr quibble R. W. Chambers Rowe scene Schmidt sense Shake Shakespeare sister sonne speak speech Steevens subst suggests thee Theobald thine thou thought Timon of Athens vnto W. W. Greg word