“The” Plays of William Shakespeare, Band 2 |
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Seite 7
... the reader is presented with a passage from the ele- gant stanzas of the Rev. W. L. Bowles , whose praise will , per- haps , persuade to a new perusal of The Tempest . " O SOVEREIGN MASTER , who with lonely state Dost rule as in ...
... the reader is presented with a passage from the ele- gant stanzas of the Rev. W. L. Bowles , whose praise will , per- haps , persuade to a new perusal of The Tempest . " O SOVEREIGN MASTER , who with lonely state Dost rule as in ...
Seite 11
Steevens . 1 set her two courses ; off to sea again , ] The courses are the main - sail and fore - sail . This term is used by Raleigh , in his Discourse on Shipping . Johnson . The passage , as Mr. Holt has observed , should be pointed ...
Steevens . 1 set her two courses ; off to sea again , ] The courses are the main - sail and fore - sail . This term is used by Raleigh , in his Discourse on Shipping . Johnson . The passage , as Mr. Holt has observed , should be pointed ...
Seite 12
The hint for this stage direction , & c . might have been received from a passage in the second book of Sidney's Arcadia , where the shipwreck of Pyrocles is described , with this concluding circum- stance : " But a monstrous cry ...
The hint for this stage direction , & c . might have been received from a passage in the second book of Sidney's Arcadia , where the shipwreck of Pyrocles is described , with this concluding circum- stance : " But a monstrous cry ...
Seite 17
The present explanation may be countenanced by the following passage in Warner's Albion's England , 1602 , B. X. ch . 57 : " Who suffreth none by might , by wealth or blood to over- topp , " Himself gives all preferment , and whom ...
The present explanation may be countenanced by the following passage in Warner's Albion's England , 1602 , B. X. ch . 57 : " Who suffreth none by might , by wealth or blood to over- topp , " Himself gives all preferment , and whom ...
Seite 18
See Mr. M. Mason's note on this passage . In another place ( a note on Othello ) Mr. M. Mason observes , that Shakspeare had probably in view , when he wrote the pas- sage before us , " the manner in which Tarquin conveyed to Sex- tus ...
See Mr. M. Mason's note on this passage . In another place ( a note on Othello ) Mr. M. Mason observes , that Shakspeare had probably in view , when he wrote the pas- sage before us , " the manner in which Tarquin conveyed to Sex- tus ...
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