The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1907 |
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Page v
... plays for which the Folio is our earliest authority . " So wrote the Cambridge Editors in 1865 , and the remark remains no less true and forcible at the present day in its applicability to The Errors as to the other plays for which the ...
... plays for which the Folio is our earliest authority . " So wrote the Cambridge Editors in 1865 , and the remark remains no less true and forcible at the present day in its applicability to The Errors as to the other plays for which the ...
Page vi
... play , and Shakespeare's knowledge of Latin . The interesting version of the Menaecmi of Plautus , published in 1595 by " W. W. " ( William Warner ) is , for purposes of com- parison with Shakespeare's Errors , reprinted in Appendix II ...
... play , and Shakespeare's knowledge of Latin . The interesting version of the Menaecmi of Plautus , published in 1595 by " W. W. " ( William Warner ) is , for purposes of com- parison with Shakespeare's Errors , reprinted in Appendix II ...
Page xi
... play is divided into acts , but not into scenes , although “ Scaena Prima ” duly figures at the begin- ning of each act , with the exception , for no apparent reason , of the second ; and the play is not furnished at the end with " the ...
... play is divided into acts , but not into scenes , although “ Scaena Prima ” duly figures at the begin- ning of each act , with the exception , for no apparent reason , of the second ; and the play is not furnished at the end with " the ...
Page xii
... play , as the latter are printed in the Folio . These lines are , distinctly , " comic trimeters " or " fourteeners " or " rime dogerel , " as Chaucer called this metre ; and the obvious and remarkable blunder of arranging them in three ...
... play , as the latter are printed in the Folio . These lines are , distinctly , " comic trimeters " or " fourteeners " or " rime dogerel , " as Chaucer called this metre ; and the obvious and remarkable blunder of arranging them in three ...
Page xiii
... plays is one of the most difficult and at the same time one of the most important subjects of Shakespearian study . Whilst it is difficult if not impossible to fix the date of composition , or production , of The Errors with absolute ...
... plays is one of the most difficult and at the same time one of the most important subjects of Shakespearian study . Whilst it is difficult if not impossible to fix the date of composition , or production , of The Errors with absolute ...
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Common terms and phrases
Antipholus of Ephesus Antipholus of Syracuse brother Capell conj chain cloake Collier comedies Compare line Craig didst dine dinner door doth DROMIO of Ephesus Dromio of Syracuse Duke Dyce Editor Enter ANTIPHOLUS Epidamnum Erot Erotium Errors Exeunt Exit fairy fetch Folio fool Gentlemen of Verona gold hair Hanmer hast hath Henry Henry IV Henry VI husband Keightley Love's Labour's Lost Luciana Malone master meaning Menaecmi Menechmus Merchant of Venice Merry Wives Mess Messenio Midsummer-Night's Dream mistress never Othello passage Peniculus Plautus play Pope pray quibble reading refers Richard III Romeo and Juliet rope's end Rowe says SCENE sense Shakespeare ship speak stale Steevens quotes Syracusian tell thee Theobald thou art Timon of Athens Titus Andronicus Twelfth Night villain Walker conj wife Wives of Windsor word
Popular passages
Page xiv - As Plautus and Seneca are accounted the best for comedy and tragedy among the Latines, so Shakespeare among the English is the most excellent in both kinds for the stage...
Page 93 - He understood the speech of birds As well as they themselves do words ; Could tell what subtlest parrots mean, That speak and think contrary clean ; What member 'tis of whom they talk When they cry ' Rope,' and
Page xiii - The author is at home in his subject, and presents his views in an almost singularly clear and satisfactory manner. . . . The volume is a valuable contribution to one of the most difficult, and at the same time one of the most important subjects of investigation at the present day.
Page xxxii - THE myriad-minded man, our, and all men's, Shakspeare, has in this piece presented us with a legitimate farce in exactest consonance with the philosophical principles and character of farce, as distinguished from comedy and from entertainments.
Page 86 - I loved her most, and thought to set my rest On her kind nursery.