The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumes 10-11J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Page 17
... cause remove . BEN . My noble uncle , do you know the cause ? MON . I neither know it , nor can learn of him . BEN . Have you impĆ³rtun'd him by any means ? MON . Both by myself , and many other friends : But he , his own affections ...
... cause remove . BEN . My noble uncle , do you know the cause ? MON . I neither know it , nor can learn of him . BEN . Have you impĆ³rtun'd him by any means ? MON . Both by myself , and many other friends : But he , his own affections ...
Page 58
... cause assigned by Mr. Steevens . MALONE . At the first entry of the characters in the history of Orlando Furioso , played before Queen Elizabeth , and published in 1594 and 1599 , Sacripant is called the Countie Sacripant . - Again ...
... cause assigned by Mr. Steevens . MALONE . At the first entry of the characters in the history of Orlando Furioso , played before Queen Elizabeth , and published in 1594 and 1599 , Sacripant is called the Countie Sacripant . - Again ...
Page 105
... cause : Ah , the immortal passado ! the punto reverso ! the hay ! 2- says our author , of Don Armado , the Spaniard , in Love's Labour's Lost . JOHNSON . " keeps time , distance , and proportion ; ] So Ben Jon- son's Bobadil : " Note ...
... cause : Ah , the immortal passado ! the punto reverso ! the hay ! 2- says our author , of Don Armado , the Spaniard , in Love's Labour's Lost . JOHNSON . " keeps time , distance , and proportion ; ] So Ben Jon- son's Bobadil : " Note ...
Page 137
... cause . Where's the surgeon ? " Boy . He's come , sir . " Mer . Now he'll keep a mumbling in my guts on the other side . Come , Benvolio , lend me thy hand : A pox o'both your houses ! " STEEVENS . " You shall find me a grave " " man ...
... cause . Where's the surgeon ? " Boy . He's come , sir . " Mer . Now he'll keep a mumbling in my guts on the other side . Come , Benvolio , lend me thy hand : A pox o'both your houses ! " STEEVENS . " You shall find me a grave " " man ...
Page 160
... cause of quiet joy . " See also Lyly's Euphues , 1580 : " Thou sayest banishment is better to the freeborne . There be many meates which are sowre in the mouth and sharp in the maw ; but if thou mingle them with sweet sawces , they ...
... cause of quiet joy . " See also Lyly's Euphues , 1580 : " Thou sayest banishment is better to the freeborne . There be many meates which are sowre in the mouth and sharp in the maw ; but if thou mingle them with sweet sawces , they ...
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Common terms and phrases
agayne ancient copies Antipholus art thou beauty Ben Jonson Benvolio brest called Capulet comedy dead death dedly dost doth Dromio DUKE eche edition editors emendation Enter Ephesus Euen euery Exeunt eyes fair frend Friar fryer geue gleek greefe hand hart hath haue hear heart heaven hence howre husband JOHNSON kiss lady lord loue Love's Labour's Lost lyfe MALONE Mantua married master means Mercutio mistress Montague mynde night nurce NURSE old copy Paris passage payd payne play poem Pope pray prince quarto quoth Rape of Lucrece rest Romeo Romeus and Juliet scene second folio Shakspeare sorow speak speech STEEVENS stryfe sweet teares tell thee theyr thine thing thou art thou hast thought tomb Tybalt Verona vnto WARBURTON wherefore whilst wife wilt woordes word wyfe yong