The Plays of William Shakspeare, Band 17 |
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Seite 7
... fuppofe the poet bufy in reading his own work ; and that these three lines are the introdu & ion of the poem addreffed to Timon , which he afterwards gives the painter an account of . WARBURTON . 9 - which oozes- ] The folio copy reads ...
... fuppofe the poet bufy in reading his own work ; and that these three lines are the introdu & ion of the poem addreffed to Timon , which he afterwards gives the painter an account of . WARBURTON . 9 - which oozes- ] The folio copy reads ...
Seite 15
... fuppofe , is the meaning . MALONE . 6 through him Drink the free air . ] That is , catch his breath in affected fond . nefs . JOHNSON , A fimilar phrase occurs in Ben Jonfon's Every Man in his Hu- mour : By this air , the most divine ...
... fuppofe , is the meaning . MALONE . 6 through him Drink the free air . ] That is , catch his breath in affected fond . nefs . JOHNSON , A fimilar phrase occurs in Ben Jonfon's Every Man in his Hu- mour : By this air , the most divine ...
Seite 26
... fuppofe , wrote : That I had no angry wit . - To be a lord ! Art thou , & c . Apemautus is afked , why after having wished to be a lord , he fhould hate himself . He replies , For this reafon ; that I had no wit or difcretion ] in my ...
... fuppofe , wrote : That I had no angry wit . - To be a lord ! Art thou , & c . Apemautus is afked , why after having wished to be a lord , he fhould hate himself . He replies , For this reafon ; that I had no wit or difcretion ] in my ...
Seite 31
... fuppofe that by our belters are meant the gods , is very harsh , becaufe to imitate the gods has been hi- therto reckoned the highest pitch of human virtue . The whole is a trite and obvious thought , uttered by Timon with a kind of ...
... fuppofe that by our belters are meant the gods , is very harsh , becaufe to imitate the gods has been hi- therto reckoned the highest pitch of human virtue . The whole is a trite and obvious thought , uttered by Timon with a kind of ...
Seite 44
... fuppofe our author to have written : I pr'ythee let us be provided straight- So , in Hamlet : " Make her grave fraight . " i . e . immediately . STEEVENS . Enter another Servant . 2. SERV . May it please 44 TIMON OF ATHENS .
... fuppofe our author to have written : I pr'ythee let us be provided straight- So , in Hamlet : " Make her grave fraight . " i . e . immediately . STEEVENS . Enter another Servant . 2. SERV . May it please 44 TIMON OF ATHENS .
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againſt ALCIB Alcibiades anſwer Antony and Cleopatra APEM Apemantus Athens Aufidius becauſe beft Cominius Coriolanus Cymbeline editors emendation Enter Exeunt expreffion faid fame fecond folio feems fenate fenfe fent fervant ferve fhall fhould fhow fignifies fimilar firft FLAV foldier fome fool fpeak fpeech friends ftand ftill fuch fuppofe fure fword gods Hanmer hath heart himſelf honeft honour houfe houſe inftances inftead itſelf JOHNSON King Henry King Henry VI King Lear laft lefs lord Lucullus Macbeth mafter MALONE Marcius means meaſure Menenius moft muft muſt myſelf noble obferved occafion old copy Othello paffage perfon pleaſe Plutarch poet prefent propofed reafon Rome ſay Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſhall Sir Thomas Hanmer ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou art Timon Timon of Athens tranflation ufed uſed Volces WARBURTON whofe word ΤΙΜ