The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumes 10-11J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Results 6-10 of 98
Page 9
... passage there standing thus : " Ile play the tyrant ; Ile first begin with the maids , and off with their heads : " but the true reading is found in the undated quarto . MALONE . -poor John . ] is hake , dried , and salted . MALONE ...
... passage there standing thus : " Ile play the tyrant ; Ile first begin with the maids , and off with their heads : " but the true reading is found in the undated quarto . MALONE . -poor John . ] is hake , dried , and salted . MALONE ...
Page 11
... passage : " Behold next I see Contempt marching forth , giving mee the fico with his thombe in his mouth . " In a trans- lation from Stephens's Apology for Herodotus , in 1607 , p . 142 , I meet with these words : " It is said of the ...
... passage : " Behold next I see Contempt marching forth , giving mee the fico with his thombe in his mouth . " In a trans- lation from Stephens's Apology for Herodotus , in 1607 , p . 142 , I meet with these words : " It is said of the ...
Page 17
... passage in our author where so great an improvement of language is obtained , by so slight a deviation from the text . " STEEVENS . Dr. Johnson's conjecture is , I think , unfounded ; the simile relates solely to Romeo's concealing the ...
... passage in our author where so great an improvement of language is obtained , by so slight a deviation from the text . " STEEVENS . Dr. Johnson's conjecture is , I think , unfounded ; the simile relates solely to Romeo's concealing the ...
Page 18
... passage might have remembered the following lines in one of the Sonnets of the same writer , who was then extremely popular . The lines , whe- ther remembered by our author or not , add such support to Mr. Theobald's emendation , that I ...
... passage might have remembered the following lines in one of the Sonnets of the same writer , who was then extremely popular . The lines , whe- ther remembered by our author or not , add such support to Mr. Theobald's emendation , that I ...
Page 19
... passage seems to have been misapprehended . Benvolio has lamented that the God of love , who appears so gentle , should be a tyrant . It is no less to be lamented , adds Romeo , that the blind god should yet be able to direct his arrows ...
... passage seems to have been misapprehended . Benvolio has lamented that the God of love , who appears so gentle , should be a tyrant . It is no less to be lamented , adds Romeo , that the blind god should yet be able to direct his arrows ...
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Common terms and phrases
agayne ancient copies Antipholus art thou beauty Ben Jonson Benvolio brest called Capulet comedy dead death dedly dost doth Dromio DUKE eche edition editors emendation Enter Ephesus Euen euery Exeunt eyes fair frend Friar fryer geue gleek greefe hand hart hath haue hear heart heaven hence howre husband JOHNSON kiss lady lord loue Love's Labour's Lost lyfe MALONE Mantua married master means Mercutio mistress Montague mynde night nurce NURSE old copy Paris passage payd payne play poem Pope pray prince quarto quoth Rape of Lucrece rest Romeo Romeus and Juliet scene second folio Shakspeare sorow speak speech STEEVENS stryfe sweet teares tell thee theyr thine thing thou art thou hast thought tomb Tybalt Verona vnto WARBURTON wherefore whilst wife wilt woordes word wyfe yong