The Works of Shakespeare ...Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1907 |
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Page xiii
... means ry , its dumb - show , and by its comparative merit re- to its rivals for popular favour , succeeded and kept on of the stage , the author would not feel himself pon to rewrite a play which answered its main end , subject of which ...
... means ry , its dumb - show , and by its comparative merit re- to its rivals for popular favour , succeeded and kept on of the stage , the author would not feel himself pon to rewrite a play which answered its main end , subject of which ...
Page xxi
... means of informing himself upon nner of life of his subjects , who owing to the laxity rule had fallen into dissolute ways . Similarly , it to me , Shakespeare may have conceived Lysimachus hing to probe the plague - sores of the city ...
... means of informing himself upon nner of life of his subjects , who owing to the laxity rule had fallen into dissolute ways . Similarly , it to me , Shakespeare may have conceived Lysimachus hing to probe the plague - sores of the city ...
Page xxviii
... mean nothing more than the true history of Pericles as told in the play , it is just conceivable that Wilkins was alluding to his own version as having been tampered with by Shakespeare . In regard to the date at which Pericles , in ...
... mean nothing more than the true history of Pericles as told in the play , it is just conceivable that Wilkins was alluding to his own version as having been tampered with by Shakespeare . In regard to the date at which Pericles , in ...
Page 12
... means no more than- he's no honest man , that knowing , " etc. , and so Clarke . But surely the idea is that of some creature perfect outwardly , but vile inwardly , who awaits the coming of a visitor . To receive the welcome of such a ...
... means no more than- he's no honest man , that knowing , " etc. , and so Clarke . But surely the idea is that of some creature perfect outwardly , but vile inwardly , who awaits the coming of a visitor . To receive the welcome of such a ...
Page 16
... mean To have his head . • • 136. shun ] Malone ; shew Qq , Ff 3 , 4. 143 , 144. He Arranged as in Malone ; the first line ends meaning , in Qq , Ff 3 , 4 . 124 , 125. be .. were ] Here both words indicate doubt , disbelief . For the ...
... mean To have his head . • • 136. shun ] Malone ; shew Qq , Ff 3 , 4. 143 , 144. He Arranged as in Malone ; the first line ends meaning , in Qq , Ff 3 , 4 . 124 , 125. be .. were ] Here both words indicate doubt , disbelief . For the ...
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Acts Antiochus Antony and Cleopatra arms Arranged Bawd Boult brothel call'd Cambridge Editors Cerimon Cleon Collier Compare The Winter's Cymbeline daughter dead death Delius Dionyza Divided doth doubt Dyce edition Enter GOWER Enter PERICLES Exeunt Exit eyes father Fleay Folios Gent Gentlemen give gods hast hath hear heaven Helicanus Henry honour Julius Cæsar king Knight lady Leonine line ends line in Qq lord Lychorida Lysimachus Malone compares Marina mean mistress Mitylene ne'er never old copies pare passage Pericles play pray Prince of Tyre prose in Qq Quarto queen quotes rest Romeo and Juliet Rowe Sail Sailors SCENE sense Shakespeare Shakespearian Grammar shore Simonides sorrow speak Tarsus tell Thai Thaisa Thaliard thee there's thou art thought Troilus and Cressida Tyre unto verb virgin Wilkins Wilkins's novel wilt wind Winter's Tale word ΙΟ