The Plays of William Shakspeare ... |
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Página 22
You can play no part but Pyramus ; for Pyramus is a sweet - fac'd man ; a proper man , as one fhall fee in a fummer's day ; a moft lovely gentleman - like man ; therefore you must needs play Pyramus . Bot . Well , I will undertake it .
You can play no part but Pyramus ; for Pyramus is a sweet - fac'd man ; a proper man , as one fhall fee in a fummer's day ; a moft lovely gentleman - like man ; therefore you must needs play Pyramus . Bot . Well , I will undertake it .
Página 28
Thofe that Hobgoblin call you , and sweet Puck 2 , You tion of the mill feems out of place , for fhe is not now telling the good , but the evil that he does . I would regulate the lines thus : And fometimes make the breathless housewife ...
Thofe that Hobgoblin call you , and sweet Puck 2 , You tion of the mill feems out of place , for fhe is not now telling the good , but the evil that he does . I would regulate the lines thus : And fometimes make the breathless housewife ...
Página 40
... not inelegantly , conje & ures , that the poet wrote : " -on old Hyems ' chill and icy crown . " . · An odorous chaplet of sweet summer buds Is It 40 MIDSUMMER - NIGHT's DREAM . Fall in the fresh lap of the crimifon rofe3; ...
... not inelegantly , conje & ures , that the poet wrote : " -on old Hyems ' chill and icy crown . " . · An odorous chaplet of sweet summer buds Is It 40 MIDSUMMER - NIGHT's DREAM . Fall in the fresh lap of the crimifon rofe3; ...
Página 41
An odorous chaplet of sweet summer buds Is , as in mockery , fet : The fpring , the fummer , The childing autumn 7 , angry winter , change Their wonted liveries ; and the ' mazed world , By their increase , now knows not which is which ...
An odorous chaplet of sweet summer buds Is , as in mockery , fet : The fpring , the fummer , The childing autumn 7 , angry winter , change Their wonted liveries ; and the ' mazed world , By their increase , now knows not which is which ...
Página 45
To which opinion Shakspeare alludes in his Comedy of Errors : " O train me not , Sweet mermaid , with thy note , " To drown me in thy fifter's flood of tears . " On the whole , it is the nobleft and juftest allegory that was ever ...
To which opinion Shakspeare alludes in his Comedy of Errors : " O train me not , Sweet mermaid , with thy note , " To drown me in thy fifter's flood of tears . " On the whole , it is the nobleft and juftest allegory that was ever ...
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