The Plays of William Shakspeare, Band 12Printed and fold by J.J. Tourneisen, 1801 |
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Seite 16
... believe the transpofition to be needless . STEEVENS . 3 -thou doft confent , & c . ] i . e . affent . So , in St. Luke's Gospel , xxiii . 51 : The fame had not confented to the counsel and dead of them . " STEEVENS , Hath caus'd his ...
... believe the transpofition to be needless . STEEVENS . 3 -thou doft confent , & c . ] i . e . affent . So , in St. Luke's Gospel , xxiii . 51 : The fame had not confented to the counsel and dead of them . " STEEVENS , Hath caus'd his ...
Seite 18
... believe that caitiff in our language ever fignified a prisoner . I take it to be derived , not from captif , but from chétif , Fr. poor , miferable . TYRWHITT . unfurnish'd walls , ] In our ancient caffles the naked ftone walls were ...
... believe that caitiff in our language ever fignified a prisoner . I take it to be derived , not from captif , but from chétif , Fr. poor , miferable . TYRWHITT . unfurnish'd walls , ] In our ancient caffles the naked ftone walls were ...
Seite 35
... believe that what Mr. Theobald and Mr. Pope have restored were expunged in the revision by the author : If these lines are omitted , the fense is more coherent . Nothing is more frequent among dramatic writers , than to fhorten their ...
... believe that what Mr. Theobald and Mr. Pope have restored were expunged in the revision by the author : If these lines are omitted , the fense is more coherent . Nothing is more frequent among dramatic writers , than to fhorten their ...
Seite 36
... believe , was thinking on the words of Lyly in the page from which an extract has been already made : I fpeake this to this end , that though thy exile feem grievous to thee , yet guiding thy felfe with the rules of philofophy , it ...
... believe , was thinking on the words of Lyly in the page from which an extract has been already made : I fpeake this to this end , that though thy exile feem grievous to thee , yet guiding thy felfe with the rules of philofophy , it ...
Seite 49
... believe , took this idea from the figure of Time , who was reprefented as carrying a fickle as well as a Scythe . fickle was anciently called a crook , and fometimes , as in the fol- VOL . XII . E 1 Live in thy fhame , but die not fhame ...
... believe , took this idea from the figure of Time , who was reprefented as carrying a fickle as well as a Scythe . fickle was anciently called a crook , and fometimes , as in the fol- VOL . XII . E 1 Live in thy fhame , but die not fhame ...
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againſt alfo ancient Aumerle becauſe blood BOLING Bolingbroke called coufin crown death doft doth duke duke of Hereford earl Earl of March Exeunt expreffion fack faid Falftaff fame fays fcene fecond feems fenfe feven fhall fhame fhould fhow fignifies firft folio fome forrow foul fpeak fpeech frike ftand ftate ftill fuch fuppofe fweet fword Gaunt Glendower grief Harry Percy hath heaven Henry VI himſelf Holinfhed honour horfe horſe houſe JOHNSON King Henry King Richard laft Lancaſter loft lord Maid Marian MALONE means meaſure Morris dance Mortimer muft muſt myſelf night noble Northumberland obferves old copies Oldcastle Percy perfon play POINS prefent Prince prince of Wales quarto Queen reaſon RICH RITSON ſay Shakspeare ſhall Sir John Sir John Oldcastle ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou art thouſand ufed uſed WARBURTON word YORK