The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volume 17J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Page 9
... expression in Coriolanus : 66 bury all which yet distinctly ranges , " In heaps and piles of ruin . " Again , in Much Ado about Nothing , Act ii . sc . ii : " Whatso- ever comes athwart his affection , ranges evenly with mine ...
... expression in Coriolanus : 66 bury all which yet distinctly ranges , " In heaps and piles of ruin . " Again , in Much Ado about Nothing , Act ii . sc . ii : " Whatso- ever comes athwart his affection , ranges evenly with mine ...
Page 11
... expression occurs again in another play , but I have lost my reference to it . STEEVENS . No messenger ; but thine and all alone , & c . ] Cleopatra has said , " Call in the messengers ; " and afterwards , " Hear the ambassadors ...
... expression occurs again in another play , but I have lost my reference to it . STEEVENS . No messenger ; but thine and all alone , & c . ] Cleopatra has said , " Call in the messengers ; " and afterwards , " Hear the ambassadors ...
Page 14
... expression of a similar import with one which is found in Characterismi , or Lenton's Leasures , 8vo . 1631. In the description of a contented cuckold , he is said to “ hold his velvet horns as high as the best of them . " Let it also ...
... expression of a similar import with one which is found in Characterismi , or Lenton's Leasures , 8vo . 1631. In the description of a contented cuckold , he is said to “ hold his velvet horns as high as the best of them . " Let it also ...
Page 17
... expression . STEEVENS . Then , belike , my children shall have no names : ] If I have already had the best of my fortune , then I suppose I shall never name children , that is , I am never to be married . However , tell me the truth ...
... expression . STEEVENS . Then , belike , my children shall have no names : ] If I have already had the best of my fortune , then I suppose I shall never name children , that is , I am never to be married . However , tell me the truth ...
Page 41
... expression . In the first scene of the play Antony had called her- 66 wrangling queen , " Whom every thing becomes . " It is to this , perhaps , that she alludes . Or she may mean- That conduct which , in my own opinion , becomes me ...
... expression . In the first scene of the play Antony had called her- 66 wrangling queen , " Whom every thing becomes . " It is to this , perhaps , that she alludes . Or she may mean- That conduct which , in my own opinion , becomes me ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient Antony appears better Cæsar called CHAR Charmian CLEO Cleopatra Cordelia Coriolanus CORN Cymbeline daughters death doth Edgar edition editors Edmund Egypt emendation Enobarbus Enter EROS Exeunt Exit eyes father fool fortune give Gloster gods Goneril Hanmer hath hear heart honour IRAS JOHNSON Julius Cæsar KENT King Henry King Lear knave lady LEAR lord Macbeth madam MALONE Mark Antony MASON means MESS metre never night noble o'the Octavia old copy old reading omitted Othello passage perhaps play Plutarch poet Pompey poor pray Proculeius quartos read queen Regan RITSON says scene second folio seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies Sir Thomas Hanmer speak speech STEEVENS suppose sword tell thee Theobald thine thing thou art thou hast thought Timon of Athens TOLLET Troilus and Cressida TYRWHITT WARBURTON word