Timon of Athens |
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Page 36
... speech in Timon the protagonist says , ' You must eat men ' ( Iv . iii . 428 ) . In Timon 1. ii . 75–9 the thought is given a further twist in an exchange between Timon and Alcibiades : Tim . Alcib . You had rather be at a breakfast of ...
... speech in Timon the protagonist says , ' You must eat men ' ( Iv . iii . 428 ) . In Timon 1. ii . 75–9 the thought is given a further twist in an exchange between Timon and Alcibiades : Tim . Alcib . You had rather be at a breakfast of ...
Page 86
... speech . The speech , however , is a big one . Timon , furibundus still , pronounces his curse . Because he speaks not simply from hatred but from a subverted moral basis , he wishes on his fellow creatures not simply suffering but a ...
... speech . The speech , however , is a big one . Timon , furibundus still , pronounces his curse . Because he speaks not simply from hatred but from a subverted moral basis , he wishes on his fellow creatures not simply suffering but a ...
Page 116
... speech of Apemantus is marked by a certain sprightliness of style and metre ; we are aware of it as a separate , formal performance . In the Folio it is even given a title , ' Apemantus Grace ' . It is , of course , an anti - grace in ...
... speech of Apemantus is marked by a certain sprightliness of style and metre ; we are aware of it as a separate , formal performance . In the Folio it is even given a title , ' Apemantus Grace ' . It is , of course , an anti - grace in ...
Contents
The Paragone | 3 |
Timon Among the Suitors | 17 |
One Playwright or Two? | 30 |
Copyright | |
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Aeschylus Alcibiades answer Apemantus appears asks audience become begins called century character clear close Coriolanus course creditors critical debt direction drama earlier edition effect Elizabethan English English Studies ethical exchange expect express fact feeling figure follows friends generosity gifts give given gold grace hand human idea implied interest jewel John kind King language later Lear less liberality live London look Lord manner meaning Merchant mind moral moved nature never obligation offered once original Oxford passage perhaps person philosopher play Poet practical present Press reference relation says scene seems seen Senator sense servants Shakespeare social society sort speak speech stage Steward strong Studies suggests thanks thing thou thought Timon of Athens turn University usurers usury wishes word writing