The Plays of William Shakspeare ... |
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Página 6
... propitious or favourable ; " Sis bonus O , felixque tuis ! " Virg . Ecl . 5. a sense of the word which must have been unknown to Shakspeare , but was familiar to Jonson . STEEVENS . Be sad , as we would make ye : Think PROLOGUE .
... propitious or favourable ; " Sis bonus O , felixque tuis ! " Virg . Ecl . 5. a sense of the word which must have been unknown to Shakspeare , but was familiar to Jonson . STEEVENS . Be sad , as we would make ye : Think PROLOGUE .
Página 29
... sense may be given to these obscure lines . " I am but the shadow of poor Buckingham : and even the figure or outline of this shadow begins now to fade away , being extin- guished by this impending cloud , which darkens ( or interposes ...
... sense may be given to these obscure lines . " I am but the shadow of poor Buckingham : and even the figure or outline of this shadow begins now to fade away , being extin- guished by this impending cloud , which darkens ( or interposes ...
Página 34
... sense of the word are given in a note on Romeo and Juliet , Act I. sc . iii . STEEVENS . To cope- ] To engage with , to encounter . The word is still used in some counties . JOHNSON . 7 So , in As you like it : " I love to cope him in ...
... sense of the word are given in a note on Romeo and Juliet , Act I. sc . iii . STEEVENS . To cope- ] To engage with , to encounter . The word is still used in some counties . JOHNSON . 7 So , in As you like it : " I love to cope him in ...
Página 44
... sense is only , that the travelled Englishmen were metamorphosed , by foreign fashions , into such an uncouth appearance , that they looked like mummers in a mystery . JOHNSON . That mysteries is the genuine reading , [ Dr. Warburton ...
... sense is only , that the travelled Englishmen were metamorphosed , by foreign fashions , into such an uncouth appearance , that they looked like mummers in a mystery . JOHNSON . That mysteries is the genuine reading , [ Dr. Warburton ...
Página 64
... sense will then be , ( whether quaintly or . poetically expressed , let the reader determine ) no malicious ac- tion shall close my grave , i . e . attend the conclusion of my exist- ence , or terminate my life ; the last action of it ...
... sense will then be , ( whether quaintly or . poetically expressed , let the reader determine ) no malicious ac- tion shall close my grave , i . e . attend the conclusion of my exist- ence , or terminate my life ; the last action of it ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Achilles Æneas AGAM Agamemnon Ajax ancient Antony and Cleopatra archbishop Ben Jonson blood Buckingham Calchas called cardinal CHAM command CRES Cressida Diomed DIOMEDES doth Duke editions editors Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair fear folio fool GENT give grace Grecian Greeks hand Hanmer hath heart heaven HECT Hector Helen Holinshed honour i'the JOHNSON Julius Cæsar KATH King Henry King Richard king's kiss lady lord Lord Chamberlain Lydgate MALONE MASON means Menelaus Neoptolemus Nestor never night noble o'the old copy Pandarus Paris passage PATR Patroclus play poet Pope pray Priam prince quarto queen RITSON SCENE sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sir Thomas soul speak speech STEEVENS suppose sweet sword tell thee THEOBALD THER Thersites thing thou thought Troilus Troilus and Cressida Trojan Troy true truth ULYSS unto WARBURTON Wolsey word