The Plays of William Shakspeare, Tập 11 |
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Trang 12
... nature Do fwarm upon him , ) from the western ifles Of Kernes and Gallowglaffes is fupplied ; 6 The old copy has ... natural state , is liable . 6 -—from the western ifles STEEVENS . Of Kernes and Gallowglaffes is fupplied ; ] Whether ...
... nature Do fwarm upon him , ) from the western ifles Of Kernes and Gallowglaffes is fupplied ; 6 The old copy has ... natural state , is liable . 6 -—from the western ifles STEEVENS . Of Kernes and Gallowglaffes is fupplied ; ] Whether ...
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... natural hiftory of the winds , & c . is foreign to the explanation of this paffage . Shakspeare does not mean , in conformity to any theory , to say that storms generally come from the eaft , If it be allowed that they fometimes iffue ...
... natural hiftory of the winds , & c . is foreign to the explanation of this paffage . Shakspeare does not mean , in conformity to any theory , to say that storms generally come from the eaft , If it be allowed that they fometimes iffue ...
Trang 17
... nature the crack of doom . JOHNSON . Crack is ufed on a fimilar occafion by Barnaby Googe , in his Cupido Conquered , 1563 : " The canon's cracke begins to roore " And darts full thycke they flye , " And cover'd thycke the armyes both ...
... nature the crack of doom . JOHNSON . Crack is ufed on a fimilar occafion by Barnaby Googe , in his Cupido Conquered , 1563 : " The canon's cracke begins to roore " And darts full thycke they flye , " And cover'd thycke the armyes both ...
Trang 20
... natural that it is every day used in common difcourse . JOHNSON . " Mr. M. Mason obferves that the meaning of Lenox is , " So fhould he look , who feems as if he had ftrange things to speak . The following paffage in The Tempeft feems ...
... natural that it is every day used in common difcourse . JOHNSON . " Mr. M. Mason obferves that the meaning of Lenox is , " So fhould he look , who feems as if he had ftrange things to speak . The following paffage in The Tempeft feems ...
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... natural world , as here , from every thing abfurd in the moral . But as extravagant as all this is , the play has had the power to charm and bewitch every audience from that time to this . WARBURTON . Wierd comes from the Anglo - Saxon ...
... natural world , as here , from every thing abfurd in the moral . But as extravagant as all this is , the play has had the power to charm and bewitch every audience from that time to this . WARBURTON . Wierd comes from the Anglo - Saxon ...
Thuật ngữ và cụm từ thông dụng
againſt alfo ancient Banquo BAST becauſe blood Boethius caufe circumftance Conftance Coriolanus Cymbeline death doth Duncan emendation England Enter Exeunt expreffion Faery Queen faid fame Faulconbridge fays fcene fear fecond feems fenfe fhall fhould fhow fifters fignifies fimilar firft flain fleep folio following paffage fome foul fpeak fpeech fpirits ftand ftill ftrange fuch fuppofe fupported fure fword hath heaven Hecate Henry IV himſelf Holinfhed honour Hubert inftance itſelf JOHNSON King Henry King John Lady Macbeth laft loft lord MACB MACD Macduff MALONE means meaſure moft muft murder muſt myſelf night obferves occafion old copy paffage perfon Pope prefent prince purpoſe Queen Rape of Lucrece reafon Richard Richard III ſay ſcene ſeems Shakspeare ſhall ſpeak STEEVENS thane thee thefe Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou thought tranflation ufed uſed WARBURTON whofe WITCH word