By the Rev. JOHN HUNTER, M.A. SELECT PLAYS of SHAKSPEARE, with Explanatory and Illustrative Notes, Critical Remarks, and other Aids to a thorough under- Examination RICHARD II. HENRY VIII. JULIUS CÆSAR. AS YOU LIKE IT. MERCHANT of VENICE. KING LEAR. MACBETH. BOOKS I. and II. of MILTON'S PARADISE LOST: EXAMINATION-QUESTIONS on the FIRST TWO BOOKS of MILTON'S PARADISE LOST, and on SHAKSPEARE'S MER- MILTON'S COMUS, L'ALLEGRO, and IL PENSE- EXERCISES in ENGLISH PARSING, Progressively arranged and adapted to the Author's Text-Book of English Grammar with PARAPHRASING ...12mo. 66. and ANALYSIS of SENTENCES, SCHOOL MANUAL of LETTER WRITING: Containing numerous Models of Letters on Commercial and other subjects; with Exercises in or INTRODUCTION to the WRITING of PRECIS tated Summary of 'Books I. and II. with numerous Extracts from the Work and JOHNSON'S RASSELAS, with Introductory Remarks, ........ London: LONGMANS and CO. Paternoster Row. 2 School Books by the Rev. J. HUNTER, M.A. EXERCISES in the FIRST FOUR RULES of ARITH- SOLUTIONS of QUESTIONS in ARITHMETIC and BOOK-KEEPING used in the Civil Service Examinations of 1862, and published MODERN ARITHMETIC: a Treatise adapted for School EXAMINATION-QUESTIONS in BOOK-KEEPING by ...... HUNTER'S EXAMINATION-QUESTIONS and DIREC- ....12mo. 18. RULED PAPER for the various Forms of Account-Books *PROGRESSIVE EXERCISES in BOOK-KEEPING by An EASY INTRODUCTION to the HIGHER TREATISES 12mo. 3s. 6d.-KEY, 28. EXAMINATION-QUESTIONS on COLENSO'S ELE- . MENTS of ALGEBRA, PART I. .12mo. 28. 6d. ELEMENTS of PLANE TRIGONOMETRY, for Begin- ELEMENTS of MENSURATION, simplified for the use of ....... TREATISE on LOGARITHMS: with Copious Tables of Selected Logarithms; explaining simply the Nature and Use of Logarithms and London: LONGMANS and CO. Paternoster Row. OF KING RICHARD II. WITH EXPLANATORY AND ILLUSTRATIVE NOTES AND NUMEROUS EXTRACTS FROM THE HISTORY ON WHICH THE PLAY IS FOUNDED. BY THE REV. JOHN HUNTER, M.A. Instructor of Candidates for the Civil Service and other Public Examinations; and Malone. §. 64. LONDON: PREFACE. THE first edition of Shakspeare's King Richard II., and the most accurate that has come down to us, is the quarto of 1597. Three other quarto editions preceded the folio of 1623, viz.: a second edition in 1598, a third in 1608, and a fourth in 1615. In the third edition the play was enlarged, as the title tells us, with new additions of the Parliament sceane, and the Deposing of King Richard.' The first folio, however, is our best authority for the text of this part of the play, which consists of about 160 lines in Act IV., beginning with the fourth line of p. 90, 'May it please you,' &c., and ending with the sixth line of p. 96, That rise thus nimbly,' &c. The new additions had probably been a portion of the play as originally written, and their omission in stage performance, and in the first two quartos, suggested by the fear of offending Elizabeth; for that queen was very sensitive on the subject of Richard's deposition, on account of the frequent attempts made by the King of Spain and other foreign powers to incite her subjects to depose her. |