The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 6Blackie, 1895 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 70
Seite 104
... PASSAGE . - The explanation given in our foot - note of passage = passengers is the one generally adopted . Perhaps it means , more literally , " no passing of steps . " We may compare Comedy of Errors , iii . 1. 98 , 99 : If by strong ...
... PASSAGE . - The explanation given in our foot - note of passage = passengers is the one generally adopted . Perhaps it means , more literally , " no passing of steps . " We may compare Comedy of Errors , iii . 1. 98 , 99 : If by strong ...
Seite 208
... passage ( 144 ) . 316. Line 34 : plebeians . - The accent is on the first syl- lable , as in Coriolanus , i . 9. 7 : That , with the fusty plébeians , hate thine honours . See also v . 4. 39 of the same play . 317. Lines 36 , 37 : most ...
... passage ( 144 ) . 316. Line 34 : plebeians . - The accent is on the first syl- lable , as in Coriolanus , i . 9. 7 : That , with the fusty plébeians , hate thine honours . See also v . 4. 39 of the same play . 317. Lines 36 , 37 : most ...
Seite 297
... passage where Shakespeare uses the word , I. Henry IV . v . 1. 72 : These things indeed you have articulate , it means " set forth in articles , " articulate being used as we should now used specified . 91. Line 82 : I sometime lay ...
... passage where Shakespeare uses the word , I. Henry IV . v . 1. 72 : These things indeed you have articulate , it means " set forth in articles , " articulate being used as we should now used specified . 91. Line 82 : I sometime lay ...
Inhalt
scene 1 lines 123126 | 23 |
scene 1 lines 2022 | 61 |
scene 1 line | 69 |
8 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
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