The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite xvii
... play , but took the workmanship of some inferior writer , recast certain of the scenes , enriched others with some touches of his own , and supplied the part of Timon , as we have it , entirely from himself : all which is thought to ...
... play , but took the workmanship of some inferior writer , recast certain of the scenes , enriched others with some touches of his own , and supplied the part of Timon , as we have it , entirely from himself : all which is thought to ...
Seite xviii
... have been raised touching this play . And there are at least two instances of incompleteness , result- ing , apparently , from oversight , which may be in this way satisfactorily explained . One is in Act II , xviii Introduction THE LIFE ...
... have been raised touching this play . And there are at least two instances of incompleteness , result- ing , apparently , from oversight , which may be in this way satisfactorily explained . One is in Act II , xviii Introduction THE LIFE ...
Seite xix
... play were from different hands ; whether certain parts were borrowed from an earlier drama ; or whether certain were supplied by a later hand ; or whether , according to a frequent usage of the time , the play were the joint production ...
... play were from different hands ; whether certain parts were borrowed from an earlier drama ; or whether certain were supplied by a later hand ; or whether , according to a frequent usage of the time , the play were the joint production ...
Seite xx
... play which relish least of Shakespeare are written with a good deal of vigor and spirit ; but the vigor and spirit ... play ; the first half of the second scene in Act II ; some parts of the second and fourth scenes in Act III . It may ...
... play which relish least of Shakespeare are written with a good deal of vigor and spirit ; but the vigor and spirit ... play ; the first half of the second scene in Act II ; some parts of the second and fourth scenes in Act III . It may ...
Seite xxi
... play . It is also worth noting , that in those parts of the play which relish clearly of Shakespeare there is little if any difficulty in distinguishing what is meant for verse and what for prose ; while in the other parts the two are ...
... play . It is also worth noting , that in those parts of the play which relish clearly of Shakespeare there is little if any difficulty in distinguishing what is meant for verse and what for prose ; while in the other parts the two are ...
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Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Aufidius banished bear Brutus Caius Marcius Citizens Collier Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus Corioli dost enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear flatter Flav Flavius folio follow fool fortune friends give gods gold hand Hanmer hate hath hear heart honest honor ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Julius Cæsar ladies Lart live look Lord Timon Lucullus Menenius misanthropy mother nature ne'er never noble patricians peace Phrynia play plebeians Plutarch Plutus Poet Poet's pray pride prithee revenge Roman Rome scene Senators servant Shakespeare Sicinius slaves soldiers speak spirit stand Steevens sword Tarpeian rock tell thee There's thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tion Titus Lartius tribunes Tullus unto Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia words worthy