On the Received Text of Shakespeare's Dramatic Writings and Its Improvement, 2. köideLongman, Green, Longman, and Roberts, 1866 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 46
Page
... . Polonius , in conversation with the King and Queen , repeats to them what he had said to his daughter respecting Hamlet : " Lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy star . " Act ii . sc . 2 . ཟང་ ཨ་ ཟ ། ་ ཅ་ ལབབབ r the emendation.
... . Polonius , in conversation with the King and Queen , repeats to them what he had said to his daughter respecting Hamlet : " Lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy star . " Act ii . sc . 2 . ཟང་ ཨ་ ཟ ། ་ ཅ་ ལབབབ r the emendation.
Page
... Lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy soar . It is not to be concealed , however , that Shake- speare does not elsewhere employ soar * as a noun , and this is a valid objection ; but the author who makes dare into a substantive , would not ...
... Lord Hamlet is a prince out of thy soar . It is not to be concealed , however , that Shake- speare does not elsewhere employ soar * as a noun , and this is a valid objection ; but the author who makes dare into a substantive , would not ...
Page
... lord's meat in him . " Act iii . sc . 1 . For " this slave unto his honour " I can find no appropriate meaning , nor do I think the only emendation I have met with a happy one , namely , " this hour . " I suggest the reading : This ...
... lord's meat in him . " Act iii . sc . 1 . For " this slave unto his honour " I can find no appropriate meaning , nor do I think the only emendation I have met with a happy one , namely , " this hour . " I suggest the reading : This ...
Page
... the raising of a beggar on the one hand , and the lowering of a lord on the other . The phrase deny't is objectionable , not only because there is nothing to which the pronoun it can refer , aown , and it is the latter meaning that the.
... the raising of a beggar on the one hand , and the lowering of a lord on the other . The phrase deny't is objectionable , not only because there is nothing to which the pronoun it can refer , aown , and it is the latter meaning that the.
Page
... certainly been introduced some lines before , but they had been dismissed to make room for the beggar and the lord , who had also served the author's purpose , and been dropped . The two cance . If this is the true interpretation , then.
... certainly been introduced some lines before , but they had been dismissed to make room for the beggar and the lord , who had also served the author's purpose , and been dropped . The two cance . If this is the true interpretation , then.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
alteration Antony and Cleopatra appears beauty blood blunder Cæsar cited clause commentators connexion copyist Coriolanus correction corrupt critics Crown 8vo Cymbeline Dictionary doth dramas emendation English epithet error Essays expression extract figure folio genuine Hamlet Henry History honour incongruity instance italicised Johnson Julius Cæsar King language last line latter lord Macbeth Malone meaning Merchant of Venice metaphorical noun objection obscure occurs old copies Othello passage peace Pericles perverted phrase play poet Post 8vo present probably propose to read quarto quoted reader received text remarks Richard II RICHARD WHATELY says scarcely Second Edition second line seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian signifies simile speaker speaking speare speech spurious Steevens substitute suggest temse term thee things Third Edition thou Timon Timon of Athens tion trochee Troilus and Cressida Variorum Edition verb vols Woodcuts word writer