The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumen17J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Página 68
... Cymbeline : STEEVENS . -When a soldier was the theme , my name " Was not far off . " HENLEY . Mr. Steevens's interpretation is certainly a just one , as the words now stand ; but the sense of the words thus interpreted , being directly ...
... Cymbeline : STEEVENS . -When a soldier was the theme , my name " Was not far off . " HENLEY . Mr. Steevens's interpretation is certainly a just one , as the words now stand ; but the sense of the words thus interpreted , being directly ...
Página 71
... Cymbeline : " Your preparation can affront no less " Than what you hear of . " STEEVENS . * I would you had her spirit in such another : ] Antony means to say , I wish you had the spirit of Fulvia , embodied in such another woman as her ...
... Cymbeline : " Your preparation can affront no less " Than what you hear of . " STEEVENS . * I would you had her spirit in such another : ] Antony means to say , I wish you had the spirit of Fulvia , embodied in such another woman as her ...
Página 74
... Cymbeline , Vol . XVIII . Act I. sc . v . STEEVENS . That truth should be silent , ] We find a similar sentiment in King Lear : " Truth's a dog that must to kennel , - . " 3 STEEVENS . -your considerate stone . ] This line is passed by ...
... Cymbeline , Vol . XVIII . Act I. sc . v . STEEVENS . That truth should be silent , ] We find a similar sentiment in King Lear : " Truth's a dog that must to kennel , - . " 3 STEEVENS . -your considerate stone . ] This line is passed by ...
Página 85
... Cymbeline , Posthumus says : " To shame the guise of the world , I will begin " The fashion , less without , and more within . " If the word the commentator would introduce had been genuine , and had referred to the antecedent ...
... Cymbeline , Posthumus says : " To shame the guise of the world , I will begin " The fashion , less without , and more within . " If the word the commentator would introduce had been genuine , and had referred to the antecedent ...
Página 87
... Cymbeline : " Although they wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's looks . " Again , more appositely , in Julius Cæsar : " And that same eye , whose bend doth awe the world . " Mr. Mason , remarking on this interpretation ...
... Cymbeline : " Although they wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's looks . " Again , more appositely , in Julius Cæsar : " And that same eye , whose bend doth awe the world . " Mr. Mason , remarking on this interpretation ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alexas ancient Antony better Cæsar called CHAR Charmian CLEO Cleopatra Cordelia Coriolanus CORN Cymbeline daughters death dost doth Edgar edition editors Edmund Egypt emendation Enobarbus Enter Eros Exeunt Exit eyes father fool fortune give Gloster gods Goneril Hanmer hath hear heart honour IRAS JOHNSON Julius Cæsar KENT King Henry King Lear knave lady LEAR lord Macbeth madam MALONE Mark Antony MASON means MESS metre never night noble o'the Octavia old copy old reading omitted Othello passage perhaps play Plutarch poet Pompey poor pray Proculeius quartos read queen Regan RITSON says scene second folio seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies Sir Thomas Hanmer speak speech STEEVENS suppose sword tell thee THEOBALD thine thing thou art thought Timon of Athens TOLLET Troilus and Cressida WARBURTON word ΕΝΟ Ром