The Plays of William Shakspeare, Band 17Printed and fold by J.J. Tourneisen, 1801 |
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Seite 33
... sense is , — all Athenians are welcome to share my fortune : I would myself have no exclufive right or power in this house . Perhaps we might read , - I myself would have no poor . I would have every Athenian confider himself as joint ...
... sense is , — all Athenians are welcome to share my fortune : I would myself have no exclufive right or power in this house . Perhaps we might read , - I myself would have no poor . I would have every Athenian confider himself as joint ...
Seite 55
... sense of Good even , have altered it to Good morning ; without any neceffity , as from the courfe of the incidents , precedent and fubfequent , the day may well be supposed to be turn'd of noon . TYRWHITT . 1 { CAPH . It is ; -And yours ...
... sense of Good even , have altered it to Good morning ; without any neceffity , as from the courfe of the incidents , precedent and fubfequent , the day may well be supposed to be turn'd of noon . TYRWHITT . 1 { CAPH . It is ; -And yours ...
Seite 120
... sense by Ben Jonfon in his Poetafter : " And Lupus , for your fierce credulity , " One fit bim with a larger pair of ears . " In King Henry VIII . our author has fierce vanities . In all iņ- flances it may mean glaring , confpicuous ...
... sense by Ben Jonfon in his Poetafter : " And Lupus , for your fierce credulity , " One fit bim with a larger pair of ears . " In King Henry VIII . our author has fierce vanities . In all iņ- flances it may mean glaring , confpicuous ...
Seite 123
... sense the genuine reading will afford . Poverty , bears contempt hereditary , and wealth native honour . this pofition , having already mentioned the cafe of a poor and rich The want that makes him lean . Who dares , TIMON OF ATHENS . 123.
... sense the genuine reading will afford . Poverty , bears contempt hereditary , and wealth native honour . this pofition , having already mentioned the cafe of a poor and rich The want that makes him lean . Who dares , TIMON OF ATHENS . 123.
Seite 125
... sense , but is so far removed from the original reading as to be inadmiffible . Shakspeare , I have no doubt , thought at firft of those animals that are fatted by paflure , and paffed from thence to the proprietor of the foil . I have ...
... sense , but is so far removed from the original reading as to be inadmiffible . Shakspeare , I have no doubt , thought at firft of those animals that are fatted by paflure , and paffed from thence to the proprietor of the foil . I have ...
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againſt ALCIB Alcibiades anfwer Antony and Cleopatra APEM Apemantus Athens Aufidius becauſe beft Cominius Coriolanus Cymbeline emendation Enter Exeunt expreffion faid fame fecond folio feems feen fenate fenfe fent fervant ferve fervice fhall fhould fhow fignifies fimilar firft FLAV foldier fome fool fpeak fpeech friends ftand ftate ftill fuch fuppofe fure fword gods Hanmer hath heart himſelf honeft honour houfe inftance inftead JOHNSON King Henry King Henry VI King Lear laft lefs lord Lucullus Macbeth mafter MALONE Marcius means meaſure Menenius moft muft muſt myſelf noble obferved occafion old copy Othello paffage perfon Plutarch poet pray prefent propofed Rome ſay Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſhall Sir Thomas Hanmer ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou art Timon Timon of Athens tranflation ufed uſed Volces WARBURTON whofe word ΜΕΝ