The First Folio Speeches for WomenPatrick Tucker A volume of monologues for women from the First Folio texts of Shakespeare's plays, from the famous to the less familiar. The texts are faithful to the layout, spelling and punctuation of the First Folio, providing clues for the performer to liberate meaning and emotional truth. Detailed notes on how to approach the texts complement the selections. |
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Page 76
... feare to finde Mine eye too great a flatterer for my minde : Fate , shew thy force , our selves we do not owe , What is decreed , must be : and be this so . FIRST FOLIO VERSE NOTES : The gaps are where Malvolio 76 LAMDA.
... feare to finde Mine eye too great a flatterer for my minde : Fate , shew thy force , our selves we do not owe , What is decreed , must be : and be this so . FIRST FOLIO VERSE NOTES : The gaps are where Malvolio 76 LAMDA.
Page 116
... feare thrills through my veines , That almost freezes up the heate of fire : Ile call them backe againe to comfort me . Nurse , what should she do here ? My dismall Sceane , I needs must act alone : Come Viall , what if this mixture do ...
... feare thrills through my veines , That almost freezes up the heate of fire : Ile call them backe againe to comfort me . Nurse , what should she do here ? My dismall Sceane , I needs must act alone : Come Viall , what if this mixture do ...
Page 124
... feare : but if there be Yet left in Heaven , as small a drop of pittie As a Wrens eye ; fear'd Gods , a part of it . The Dreame's heere still : even when I wake it is Without me , as within me : not imagin'd , felt . ― A headlesse man ...
... feare : but if there be Yet left in Heaven , as small a drop of pittie As a Wrens eye ; fear'd Gods , a part of it . The Dreame's heere still : even when I wake it is Without me , as within me : not imagin'd , felt . ― A headlesse man ...
Contents
Introduction | 15 |
Notes on the Speeches | 22 |
Alls Well that Ends Well | 34 |
Copyright | |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
acted as questions actors alliterations and assonances Anthony argument attitude audience behold blood Brutus Cæsar CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ capitalised words capitals character choose the end Cleopatra clue colons and semi-colons CRUZ The University Cymbeline doth double entendre Editors change end words eyes feare feminine ending FOLIO VERSE NOTES full stop Gentlemen of Verona give half-line hath heaven hee's heere Henrie Condell Henry the Sixt Hermia Honor Husbands IMOGEN John Heminge Juliet Julius Cæsar Lady long thoughts looke Lord Macbeth mid-line endings Midsommer Nights Dreame Mistris nice Note 18 Note 22 Note 9 Patrick Tucker pause peize Pisanio play poore PORTIA Pucke punctuation QUEENE MARGARET repetition rhyming couplet Richard Romeo soliloquy Sonne speake speech starts spelling Sunne sweet teare thee thine thinke thou art thou shalt thy selfe Tragedie University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA Warre whole speech Wife wretched