The Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 33
Pagina viii
... hold this view : - " The original play , on which Shakespeare worked , must have been written , for the most part , either in prose or in very irregular verse . " Farmer first suggested this explanation ; Knight followed Farmer ...
... hold this view : - " The original play , on which Shakespeare worked , must have been written , for the most part , either in prose or in very irregular verse . " Farmer first suggested this explanation ; Knight followed Farmer ...
Pagina xv
... holds to the same view ; and Mr. Collier informs us that Coleridge in 1815 gave it as his opinion that the subject had been taken up by the Poet " under some temporary feeling of vexation and disappoint- ment . " We have already ...
... holds to the same view ; and Mr. Collier informs us that Coleridge in 1815 gave it as his opinion that the subject had been taken up by the Poet " under some temporary feeling of vexation and disappoint- ment . " We have already ...
Pagina xvi
... hold , for aught we can see , equally good against this . Besides , the play , as we have seen , is preëminently unsuited to the stage ; and the fail- ure of modern diligence to discover any contemporary no- tices of its performance ...
... hold , for aught we can see , equally good against this . Besides , the play , as we have seen , is preëminently unsuited to the stage ; and the fail- ure of modern diligence to discover any contemporary no- tices of its performance ...
Pagina xx
... hold us bound to make some sign towards discriminating what parts belong to the Poet . This , certainly , is a somewhat delicate and hazardous undertaking , and one in which some approximation to the truth is the utmost that can be ...
... hold us bound to make some sign towards discriminating what parts belong to the Poet . This , certainly , is a somewhat delicate and hazardous undertaking , and one in which some approximation to the truth is the utmost that can be ...
Pagina xxviii
... holds out , of making his rascally flatterers burst with envy , prove too much for him ; and he at last con- sents to ... hold a crime : my life , like the beasts of the field , shall be spent in solitude ; and Timon xxviii Introduction ...
... holds out , of making his rascally flatterers burst with envy , prove too much for him ; and he at last con- sents to ... hold a crime : my life , like the beasts of the field , shall be spent in solitude ; and Timon xxviii Introduction ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Aufidius banished bear Brutus Caius Marcius Citizens Collier Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus Corioli dost enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear flatter Flav Flavius folio follow fool fortune friends give gods gold hand Hanmer hate hath hear heart honest honor ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Julius Cæsar ladies Lart live look Lord Timon Lucullus Menenius misanthropy mother nature ne'er never noble patricians peace Phrynia play plebeians Plutarch Plutus Poet Poet's pray pride prithee revenge Roman Rome scene Senators servant Shakespeare Sicinius slaves soldiers speak spirit stand Steevens sword Tarpeian rock tell thee There's thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tion Titus Lartius tribunes Tullus unto Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia words worthy