The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite xxiv
... thought good to let you all understand it , that before the fig - tree be cut down , if any of you be desperate , you may there in time go hang yourselves . ' He died in the city of Hales , and was buried upon the sea - side . Now , it ...
... thought good to let you all understand it , that before the fig - tree be cut down , if any of you be desperate , you may there in time go hang yourselves . ' He died in the city of Hales , and was buried upon the sea - side . Now , it ...
Seite xxxviii
... thought that the original text of Shakespeare had been spoiled by actors . Knight considered the piece to be a revision of an older play , of which portions only were retained , so that Timon was to be looked upon as a companion piece ...
... thought that the original text of Shakespeare had been spoiled by actors . Knight considered the piece to be a revision of an older play , of which portions only were retained , so that Timon was to be looked upon as a companion piece ...
Seite 3
... thought that he has only to ask aid from those who have enjoyed his bounty and that all their wealth will be at his disposal . Accordingly he dispatches his servants to them with re- quests for loans . ACT III His one - time friends all ...
... thought that he has only to ask aid from those who have enjoyed his bounty and that all their wealth will be at his disposal . Accordingly he dispatches his servants to them with re- quests for loans . ACT III His one - time friends all ...
Seite 6
... thought it needful to inform the reader that these three lines are the beginning of the poem which the speaker afterwards describes . The information , whether needful or not , is doubtless correct . As the Poet strikes up the rehearsal ...
... thought it needful to inform the reader that these three lines are the beginning of the poem which the speaker afterwards describes . The information , whether needful or not , is doubtless correct . As the Poet strikes up the rehearsal ...
Seite 20
... thought fair ; still they are faults . Several speeches in this scene , that are commonly printed as verse , we print as prose , because they cannot possibly be made to run as verse save to the eye ; neither the ear nor the mind being ...
... thought fair ; still they are faults . Several speeches in this scene , that are commonly printed as verse , we print as prose , because they cannot possibly be made to run as verse save to the eye ; neither the ear nor the mind being ...
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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