The Plays of William Shakspeare |
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Página 11
7 But I do bend my speech To one that can my part in him advertise ; 8 5 - for if
our virtues , & c . ] « Paulum fepultæ diftat inertiæ - Celaia virtus . " HOR .
THEOBALD , Again , in Massinger's Maid of Honour : - Virtue , if not in adion , is a
vice , 16 ...
7 But I do bend my speech To one that can my part in him advertise ; 8 5 - for if
our virtues , & c . ] « Paulum fepultæ diftat inertiæ - Celaia virtus . " HOR .
THEOBALD , Again , in Massinger's Maid of Honour : - Virtue , if not in adion , is a
vice , 16 ...
Página 75
... wanting after the first of the Duke's speech . It would be presumptuous to
attempt to replace the , words ; but the sense , I am persuaded , is casily
recoverablc out of Juliet's anfwer . I suppose his advice , in fubftance , to have
been nearly this ...
... wanting after the first of the Duke's speech . It would be presumptuous to
attempt to replace the , words ; but the sense , I am persuaded , is casily
recoverablc out of Juliet's anfwer . I suppose his advice , in fubftance , to have
been nearly this ...
Página 145
But that some time might be given to the two women to confer together , the
players , I suppose , took part of the speech , beginning at No might nor
greatness , & c . and put it here , without troubling themselves about ils pertinency
. However ...
But that some time might be given to the two women to confer together , the
players , I suppose , took part of the speech , beginning at No might nor
greatness , & c . and put it here , without troubling themselves about ils pertinency
. However ...
Página 150
The plain and humorous sense of the speech is this . Every truc man's apparel ,
which the thief robs him of , its the thief . Why ? Because , if ii be too little for the
chief , the true man thinks it big enougli : i . e . a purchase 100 good for him .
The plain and humorous sense of the speech is this . Every truc man's apparel ,
which the thief robs him of , its the thief . Why ? Because , if ii be too little for the
chief , the true man thinks it big enougli : i . e . a purchase 100 good for him .
Página 236
This and the three next speeches I do not well understand ; there seems .
something omitted relating to Hero's consent , or to ... In his next speech , he
thinks proper to avow his love ; and when Benedick says , God forbid it should be
so , i . c .
This and the three next speeches I do not well understand ; there seems .
something omitted relating to Hero's consent , or to ... In his next speech , he
thinks proper to avow his love ; and when Benedick says , God forbid it should be
so , i . c .
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Palavras e frases frequentes
againſt Angelo anſwer appears bear BEAT Beatrice believe Benedick better bring brother called CLAUD Claudio comes common death doth Duke edit editors Enter Escal face father faults firſt fool friar give grace hand hath head hear heart heaven Henry Hero himſelf honour houſe ISAB John JOHNSON keep kind King lady LEON live look lord Lucio MALONE marry maſter means Meaſure moſt muſt nature never night old copy once paſſage PEDRO perhaps perſon play poor pray preſent prince priſon Prov Provoſt reaſon ſaid ſame ſay ſee ſeems ſenſe Shakſpeare ſhall ſhe ſhould ſhow ſome ſpeak ſpeech STEEVENS ſuch ſuppoſe tell term thank thee theſe thing thoſe thou thought tongue true uſed virtue WARBURTON woman