The Plays of William Shakespeare ...: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, Tập 14 |
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The verfification , however , in this and the preceding play is often fo irregular , that I leave the paffage before us as it stands in the firft folio . STEEVENS . VOL . XIV . с YORK . This oath I willingly take , and will KING HENRY ...
The verfification , however , in this and the preceding play is often fo irregular , that I leave the paffage before us as it stands in the firft folio . STEEVENS . VOL . XIV . с YORK . This oath I willingly take , and will KING HENRY ...
Trang 20
He had been appointed by Warwick vice - admiral of the sea , and had in charge fo to keep the paffage between Dover and Calais , that none which either favoured King Henry or his friends fhould escape untaken or undrowned : fuch at ...
He had been appointed by Warwick vice - admiral of the sea , and had in charge fo to keep the paffage between Dover and Calais , that none which either favoured King Henry or his friends fhould escape untaken or undrowned : fuch at ...
Trang 33
In vain thou fpeak'ft , poor boy ; my fa- ther's blood Hath stopp'd the paffage where thy words fhould enter . RUT . Then let my father's blood open it again ; He is a man , and , Clifford , cope with him . CLIF .
In vain thou fpeak'ft , poor boy ; my fa- ther's blood Hath stopp'd the paffage where thy words fhould enter . RUT . Then let my father's blood open it again ; He is a man , and , Clifford , cope with him . CLIF .
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STEEVENS . would not have ftain'd the roses juft with blood : ] So the fecond folio nonfenfically reads the paffage ; but the old quarto , & c . of better authority , have it thus : That face of his the hungry cannibals Would not have ...
STEEVENS . would not have ftain'd the roses juft with blood : ] So the fecond folio nonfenfically reads the paffage ; but the old quarto , & c . of better authority , have it thus : That face of his the hungry cannibals Would not have ...
Trang 49
Johnson's first explanation of this paffage is not right . Meed here means merit . So , in the fourth A & t , the King says : 66 My meed hath got me fame . " And in Timon of Athens the word is used in the same sense : 66 No meed but he ...
Johnson's first explanation of this paffage is not right . Meed here means merit . So , in the fourth A & t , the King says : 66 My meed hath got me fame . " And in Timon of Athens the word is used in the same sense : 66 No meed but he ...
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ANNE appears arms battle bear blood brother BUCK Buckingham called CLAR Clarence Clifford Contention copy crown daughter dead death doth Duke Earl edition Edward ELIZ Enter Exeunt eyes fair fame father fays fear fecond fhall fhould fight firſt folio fome foul France friends fuch George give Glofter grace GREY Haftings hand HAST hath head hear heart heaven himſelf hope John JOHNSON kill King Edward King Henry King Richard lady leave live look lord MALONE March means mind mother muſt never old play once original paffage perhaps piece poor prefent prince printed quarto queen RICH Richard Richmond ſcene Shakspeare Shakspeare's ſpeak ſpeech STEEVENS tell thee thefe theſe thing Third thou thought Tower true unto uſed Warwick wife York young