The Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Página 143
... lines , those in which Angelo deprecates the thronging of the multitude to royalty , were introduced out of special consideration to James I , who , as is well known , had a great dislike to encountering crowds of people . The lines in ...
... lines , those in which Angelo deprecates the thronging of the multitude to royalty , were introduced out of special consideration to James I , who , as is well known , had a great dislike to encountering crowds of people . The lines in ...
Página 163
... lines not worthy his patronage under whom he hath publisht them , so the author I know much offended with M. Jaggard that ( altogether unknowne to him ) presumed to make so bold with his name . " Although Heywood thus ingeniously ...
... lines not worthy his patronage under whom he hath publisht them , so the author I know much offended with M. Jaggard that ( altogether unknowne to him ) presumed to make so bold with his name . " Although Heywood thus ingeniously ...
Página 168
... lines with the hypermetrical syllable has often a pleasing effect , but during the last few years of the poet's career , their im- moderate use was affected by other dramatists , and although , for the most part , Shakespeare's meter ...
... lines with the hypermetrical syllable has often a pleasing effect , but during the last few years of the poet's career , their im- moderate use was affected by other dramatists , and although , for the most part , Shakespeare's meter ...
Página 170
... lines commencing , " Ten - in - the - hundred , " if genuine , must have been composed at a later period . The first two lines of that mock elegy are , however , undoubtedly spurious , and are omitted in the earliest discovered version ...
... lines commencing , " Ten - in - the - hundred , " if genuine , must have been composed at a later period . The first two lines of that mock elegy are , however , undoubtedly spurious , and are omitted in the earliest discovered version ...
Página 187
... lines which , according to an early tradition , were se- lected by the poet himself for his epitaph . There is an- other early but less probable statement that they were the poet's own composition ; but , at all events , it may be ...
... lines which , according to an early tradition , were se- lected by the poet himself for his epitaph . There is an- other early but less probable statement that they were the poet's own composition ; but , at all events , it may be ...
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39 | |
67 | |
108 | |
147 | |
165 | |
xxxvii | |
3 | |
5 | |
41 | |
66 | |
90 | |
119 | |
146 | |
153 | |
158 | |
vi | |
vii | |
xxxii | |
176 | |
vi | |
vii | |
xxii | |
3 | |
5 | |
37 | |
71 | |
101 | |
132 | |
158 | |
164 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Alarum battle blood brother Burgundy Cade Capell character Chronicles Clar Clarence Clif Clifford Collier conj crown death doth doubt drama dramatist Duke of Gloucester Duke of York Earl Edward emendation England English Enter Exeunt Exit father fear fight France French friends Glou Gloucester grace hand Hanmer hast hath head heart heaven Henry's Holinshed honor house of Lancaster house of York Jack Cade Joan John John Shakespeare King Henry lady latter live London lord Malone Margaret Mortimer never noble passage Plantagenet play poet poet's Pope prince Pucelle quarto Queen Reignier Richard Richard II Richard Plantagenet Salisbury scene Shakespeare shalt slain soldiers Somerset soul speak Stratford-on-Avon Suffolk sword Talbot tell theater thee thine thou art thought tion Titus Andronicus Tower town traitor unto Vaughan Warwick William Shakespeare Winchester words