The Plays of William Shakespeare ...T. Bensley, 1803 |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 84
Pagina 4
William Shakespeare. PROLOGUE . I come no more to make you laugh ; things now , That bear a weighty and a ferious brow , Sad , high , and working , full of state and woe , Such noble scenes as draw the eye to flow , We now prefent ...
William Shakespeare. PROLOGUE . I come no more to make you laugh ; things now , That bear a weighty and a ferious brow , Sad , high , and working , full of state and woe , Such noble scenes as draw the eye to flow , We now prefent ...
Pagina 12
... thing 3 Would by a good difcourfer lofe fome life , Which action's felf was tongue to . All was royal ; 4 9 • him in eye , I Still him in praife : ] So , Dryden : " Two chiefs " So match'd , as each seem'd worthiest when alone ...
... thing 3 Would by a good difcourfer lofe fome life , Which action's felf was tongue to . All was royal ; 4 9 • him in eye , I Still him in praife : ] So , Dryden : " Two chiefs " So match'd , as each seem'd worthiest when alone ...
Pagina 13
... thing view ; the office did Diftinctly his full function.5 . BUCK . Who did guide , I mean , who fet the body and ... things , or rudiments of knowledge . The word is here applied , not without a catachrefis , to a perfon . JOHNSON , 8 ...
... thing view ; the office did Diftinctly his full function.5 . BUCK . Who did guide , I mean , who fet the body and ... things , or rudiments of knowledge . The word is here applied , not without a catachrefis , to a perfon . JOHNSON , 8 ...
Pagina 17
... thing to put a thousand oakes , or an hundred oxen , into a fute of apparell , to weare a whole manor on his back . " Edit . 1634 , p . 482 . WHALLEY . • What did this vanity , But minifter & c . ] What effect had this pompous fhow ...
... thing to put a thousand oakes , or an hundred oxen , into a fute of apparell , to weare a whole manor on his back . " Edit . 1634 , p . 482 . WHALLEY . • What did this vanity , But minifter & c . ] What effect had this pompous fhow ...
Pagina 18
William Shakespeare. A thing inspir'd ; and , not confulting , broke Into a general prophecy , ―That this tempeft , Dafhing the garment of this peace , aboded The fudden breach on't . NOR . Which is budded out ; For France hath flaw'd ...
William Shakespeare. A thing inspir'd ; and , not confulting , broke Into a general prophecy , ―That this tempeft , Dafhing the garment of this peace , aboded The fudden breach on't . NOR . Which is budded out ; For France hath flaw'd ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Achilles Æneas againſt AGAM Agamemnon Ajax alfo anſwer Antony and Cleopatra becauſe buſineſs Calchas cardinal Creffida CRES defire Diomed doth Duke eringoes Exeunt expreffion faid fame fays fecond feems fenfe fhall fhould fhow firft firſt folio fome fpeak fpeech ftand ftate ftill ftrong fuch fuppofe fweet fword GENT Grecian Greeks Hanmer hath heaven HECT Hector Helen highneſs himſelf Holinfhed honour inftance itſelf JOHNSON KATH King Henry King Richard III king's lady lord Lord Chamberlain MALONE means Menelaus moft moſt muft muſt Neftor Neoptolemus noble obferves old copy paffage Pandarus Patroclus perfon play pleaſe pleaſure prefent Priam prince purpoſe quarto queen ſay Shakspeare ſhall Sir Thomas Hanmer ſpeak STEEVENS thee thefe THEOBALD THER Therfites theſe thofe thoſe thou Troilus Trojan Troy Ulyffes ULYSS uſed WARBURTON whofe Wolfey word