The Works of William ShakespeareMacmillan, 1866 |
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Seite xx
... stand be- tween the author and his readers . For , besides the recog- nized difficulties , we are convinced that there are many passages , still easily scanned and construed , and therefore not generally suspected of corruption , which ...
... stand be- tween the author and his readers . For , besides the recog- nized difficulties , we are convinced that there are many passages , still easily scanned and construed , and therefore not generally suspected of corruption , which ...
Seite xxiii
... stands the golden rule of modera- tion dictated by common sense . 4. While dealing freely with the spelling , we have desired to leave intact the diction of Shakespeare . This has not prevented us from adopting frequent corrections of ...
... stands the golden rule of modera- tion dictated by common sense . 4. While dealing freely with the spelling , we have desired to leave intact the diction of Shakespeare . This has not prevented us from adopting frequent corrections of ...
Seite 5
... stand up peerless . Cleo . Excellent falsehood ! Why did he marry Fulvia , and not love her ? I'll seem the fool I am not ; Antony Will be himself . Ant . But stirr'd by Cleopatra . Now , for the love of Love and her soft hours , 35 ...
... stand up peerless . Cleo . Excellent falsehood ! Why did he marry Fulvia , and not love her ? I'll seem the fool I am not ; Antony Will be himself . Ant . But stirr'd by Cleopatra . Now , for the love of Love and her soft hours , 35 ...
Seite 14
... stands up For the main soldier : whose quality , going on , The sides o ' the world may danger . Much is breeding , Which , like the courser's hair , hath yet but life And not a serpent's poison . Say , our pleasure , To such whose ...
... stands up For the main soldier : whose quality , going on , The sides o ' the world may danger . Much is breeding , Which , like the courser's hair , hath yet but life And not a serpent's poison . Say , our pleasure , To such whose ...
Seite 16
... stand farther from me . Ant . What's the matter ? Cleo . I know , by that same eye , there's some good news . What the married woman ? You may go : says Would she had never given you leave to come ! Let her not say ' tis I that keep you ...
... stand farther from me . Ant . What's the matter ? Cleo . I know , by that same eye , there's some good news . What the married woman ? You may go : says Would she had never given you leave to come ! Let her not say ' tis I that keep you ...
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Anon Antony Bawd beauty Becket conj Boult Cæs Cæsar Capell conj Char Charmian Cleo Cleopatra Cloten Collier conj Cymbeline dead death Dionyza Divided dost doth Dyce edition ends the lines England's Helicon Enobarbus Enter Eros Exeunt Exit eyes F₁ F₂ fair fear friends Gildon gods GUIDERIUS Hanmer hath hear heart heaven honour Hyphened by Malone Iach Iachimo Imogen Iras Jackson conj Johnson conj Keightley king lady line ends line in Ff line in Rowe Lintott and Gildon look lord love's Lucrece Lysimachus madam Malone Capell Malone conj Mark Antony mistress Mytilene night pell Pericles Pisanio Pompey Pope Posthumus pray Prince of Tyre Prose in Ff Prose in QqF3F4 Q₁ Q₁Q₂Q3 Q₂Q3 QqF3 queen Re-enter reading rest SCENE Sewell Shakespeare shame speak Steevens conj sweet thee Theobald thine thou art Walker conj Warburton ΙΟ