The Plays of William Shakspeare, Band 17 |
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Seite 12
Mr. Theobald reads - happy man ; and certainly the emendation is fufficiently plausible , though the old reading may well ftand . MALONE . The text is right . The poet envies or admires the felicity of the fenators in being Timon's ...
Mr. Theobald reads - happy man ; and certainly the emendation is fufficiently plausible , though the old reading may well ftand . MALONE . The text is right . The poet envies or admires the felicity of the fenators in being Timon's ...
Seite 37
Mine eyes cannot hold out water methinks : ] In the original edition the words ftand thus : Mine eyes cannot hold out water , methinks . To forget their faults I drink to you . Perhaps the true reading is this : Mine eyes cannot hold ...
Mine eyes cannot hold out water methinks : ] In the original edition the words ftand thus : Mine eyes cannot hold out water , methinks . To forget their faults I drink to you . Perhaps the true reading is this : Mine eyes cannot hold ...
Seite 52
But as the words ftand , they imply , that no reason can safely found his flate . I read thus : no reafon Can found his fate in fafety.- Reason cannot find his fortune to have any fafe or folid foundation .
But as the words ftand , they imply , that no reason can safely found his flate . I read thus : no reafon Can found his fate in fafety.- Reason cannot find his fortune to have any fafe or folid foundation .
Seite 59
No , thou ftand'ft fingle , thou art not on him yet . CAPH . Where's the fool now ? APEM . He laft afk'd the queftion . - Poor rogues . and ufurers ' men ! bawds between gold and want ! ALL . What are we , Apemantus ? APEM . Affes .
No , thou ftand'ft fingle , thou art not on him yet . CAPH . Where's the fool now ? APEM . He laft afk'd the queftion . - Poor rogues . and ufurers ' men ! bawds between gold and want ! ALL . What are we , Apemantus ? APEM . Affes .
Seite 119
Yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery , That fee I by our faces ; we are fellows still , Serving alike in forrow : Leak'd is our bark ; And we , poor mates , ftand on the dying deck , Hearing the furges threat : we must all part Into ...
Yet do our hearts wear Timon's livery , That fee I by our faces ; we are fellows still , Serving alike in forrow : Leak'd is our bark ; And we , poor mates , ftand on the dying deck , Hearing the furges threat : we must all part Into ...
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ancient APEM Apemantus appears Athens Aufidius bear believe better blood called comes common Coriolanus editors emendation enemies Enter Exeunt eyes fame fear fecond feems fenate fenfe fhall fhould fignifies firft folio fome fool fortune fpeak friends ftand fuch fuppofe give given gods gold hand Hanmer hath hear heart Henry himſelf honour JOHNSON keep King ladies leave live look lord MALONE Marcius MASON means Menenius moft mother muft nature never noble old copy once paffage peace Perhaps play poet poor pray prefent Roman Rome SERV Shakspeare STEEVENS tell thee thefe theſe thing thofe thou thou art thought Timon tribunes true turn ufed uſed voices WARBURTON whofe wife word