The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 6Blackie, 1895 |
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Seite 17
... nature ; of which knowledge Othello believed himself to be utterly devoid . But it is not only with regard to Iago that Othello's self - distrust helps to ruin the happiness of his life ; it is clear that , in a lesser degree perhaps ...
... nature ; of which knowledge Othello believed himself to be utterly devoid . But it is not only with regard to Iago that Othello's self - distrust helps to ruin the happiness of his life ; it is clear that , in a lesser degree perhaps ...
Seite 94
... nature , do so without a feeling of shame . To set on his wife's confidant and friend to act as a spy upon her is a meanness to which , unless his nature had been poisoned by jealousy , he never could have sunk . It is , perhaps , his ...
... nature , do so without a feeling of shame . To set on his wife's confidant and friend to act as a spy upon her is a meanness to which , unless his nature had been poisoned by jealousy , he never could have sunk . It is , perhaps , his ...
Seite 214
... nature's PIECE ' gainst fancy.— Would be to set nature's masterpiece against any that fancy could conceive . See note 189 above . Johnson ex- plains thus : " The word piece is a term appropriated to works of arts . Here Nature and Fancy ...
... nature's PIECE ' gainst fancy.— Would be to set nature's masterpiece against any that fancy could conceive . See note 189 above . Johnson ex- plains thus : " The word piece is a term appropriated to works of arts . Here Nature and Fancy ...
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Antony and Cleopatra Aufidius Brabantio Cæs Cassio Char Cleo Cominius Compare Cordelia Coriolanus Cotgrave Cyprus daughter death Desdemona dost doth Duke Edgar Edmund Emil Enobarbus Enter Eros Exeunt Exit eyes father fear Folio Fool fortune friends give Gloster gods Goneril Hamlet hath hear heart heaven Henry honour Iago Julius Cæsar Kent king King Lear knave lady Lear Line look lord madam Malone Marcius mean Menenius Merchant of Venice Mess Michael Cassio Moor nature never night noble Octavia Othello passage play Plutarch Pompey poor pray Quartos queen quotes Regan Roderigo Roman Rome SCENE sense Shakespeare soldier speak speech Steevens sword tell thee thine thing thou hast thought tribunes Troilus and Cressida unto Venice verb wife woman word