The Old Dramatists: Conjectural ReadingsThacker, Spink, 1898 - 215 pages |
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... never present with , but always beyond , ourselves . Fear , desire , and hope violently push us towards what is to come , and deprive us of the sense and considera- tion of that which is present ' ... p . 61 . The Faithful Friends , v ...
... never present with , but always beyond , ourselves . Fear , desire , and hope violently push us towards what is to come , and deprive us of the sense and considera- tion of that which is present ' ... p . 61 . The Faithful Friends , v ...
Page 2
... never in the fight To do in slander . ' Perhaps , ' And yet my nature , never , in the fight To do it , slander ; ' i.e. , and yet in the struggle to do it ( sc . to strike home ) never bring reproach upon my character , disposition ...
... never in the fight To do in slander . ' Perhaps , ' And yet my nature , never , in the fight To do it , slander ; ' i.e. , and yet in the struggle to do it ( sc . to strike home ) never bring reproach upon my character , disposition ...
Page 15
... ' May these same instruments , which you profane , Never sound more ! when drums and trumpets shall I ' the field prove flatterers , let courts and cities be Made all of false - faced soothing ! When steel Shakespeare 15.
... ' May these same instruments , which you profane , Never sound more ! when drums and trumpets shall I ' the field prove flatterers , let courts and cities be Made all of false - faced soothing ! When steel Shakespeare 15.
Page 16
... never as yet had ; where- as for drums and trumpets to be used as a prelude to a fight , would be for them to be used as they ordinarily were used . Against ' a coverture ' there are two objections . In the first place it is unlikely ...
... never as yet had ; where- as for drums and trumpets to be used as a prelude to a fight , would be for them to be used as they ordinarily were used . Against ' a coverture ' there are two objections . In the first place it is unlikely ...
Page 18
... never be allowed to sound again ! When drums and trumpets shall be em- ployed in war for the purpose of flattery , we may well expect that courts and cities should wear one face of hypocritical cajolery ( be made up of hypo- crisy and ...
... never be allowed to sound again ! When drums and trumpets shall be em- ployed in war for the purpose of flattery , we may well expect that courts and cities should wear one face of hypocritical cajolery ( be made up of hypo- crisy and ...
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Common terms and phrases
All's Antony and Cleopatra believe Chab Chabot City Wit comma Compare conjecture corruption course Covent-Garden Weeded coverture cruel death Dict doth doubt Dumb Knight Dyce English Moor explains eyes fair Fairholt fancy fear folios give follows Gifford remarks Hamlet hath Hazlitt Hazlitt's alteration heart Hollander honesty honour Humorous Courtier insert Jove Julius Cæsar King Lady Lady's Trial Lear look lord Love-sick Court Love's Love's Sacrifice Lover's Melancholy lust Mad Couple Match at Midnight means metre misprint Mistress never night nonsense old copies give Old editions passage perhaps Pericles pity play poison punctuation quarto Queen and Concubine Reuengers Tragedie says Gifford Second Maiden's Tragedy seems sense Shakespeare shalt sound speech spelt substitute suggest Sun's Darling suppose sure thee Thorney thou art thought Timon of Athens tion triumphs Troilus and Cressida whore Witch of Edmonton woman
Popular passages
Page 9 - Take but degree away, untune that string, And, hark, what discord follows ! each thing meets In mere oppugnancy : the bounded waters Should lift their bosoms higher than the shores, And make a sop of all this solid globe : Strength should be lord of imbecility, And the rude son should strike his father dead : Force should be right ; or rather, right and wrong (Between whose endless jar justice resides), Should lose their names, and so should justice too.
Page 34 - That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat. Of habits devil, is angel yet in this, That to the use of actions fair and good He likewise gives a frock or livery. That aptly is put on.
Page 70 - Tis all mine own : your marriage was my theft ; For I espoused your dowry, and I have it : I did not purpose to have added murder. The devil did not prompt me : till this minute,7 You might have safe return'd ; now you cannot. You have dogg'd your own death.
Page 56 - For colour, lips ; for sweet perfumes, her breath ; For jewels, eyes : for threads of purest gold, Hair ; for delicious choice of flowers, cheeks ; Wonder in every portion of that form.1 Hear her but speak, and you will swear the spheres Make music to the citizens in Heaven.
Page 167 - ... fit him finely ; in this paper is The juice of mandrake, by a doctor made To cast a man, whose leg should be cut off, Into a deep, a cold, and senseless sleep ; Of such approved operation That whoso takes it, is for twice twelve hours Breathless, and to all men's...
Page 12 - A gret devyn that cleped was Calkas, That in science so expert was, that he Knew wel that Troye sholde destroyed be, By answere of his god, that highte thus, Daun Phebus or Appollo Delphicus.
Page 176 - It is the very error of the moon; She comes more nearer earth than she was wont, And makes men mad.
Page 55 - FRIAR: Peace, thou hast told a tale whose every word Threatens eternal slaughter to the soul. I'm sorry I have heard it; would mine ears Had been one minute deaf before the hour That thou cam'st to me. O young man, castaway, By the religious number of mine order, I day and night have...
Page 2 - Even like an o'er-grown lion in a cave, That goes not out to prey.