The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes: With Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, Volum 5 |
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Side 14
-'Tis thought you came into the world that way . - Because you are a bastard . "
STEEVENS . * A foct of honour ) Aftep , un pas . Johnson . -fir Richard , - ] Thus
the old copy , and rightly . In act IV . Salisbury calls him fir Richard , and the king
has ...
-'Tis thought you came into the world that way . - Because you are a bastard . "
STEEVENS . * A foct of honour ) Aftep , un pas . Johnson . -fir Richard , - ] Thus
the old copy , and rightly . In act IV . Salisbury calls him fir Richard , and the king
has ...
Side 20
might have eat his part in me Upon Good - Friday , and ne'er broke his fast : } :
This thought occurs in Heywood's Dialogues upon Proverbs , 1562 / : - he may
his parte on good fridaie eate , " And fait never the wurs , for ought he shall geare
.
might have eat his part in me Upon Good - Friday , and ne'er broke his fast : } :
This thought occurs in Heywood's Dialogues upon Proverbs , 1562 / : - he may
his parte on good fridaie eate , " And fait never the wurs , for ought he shall geare
.
Side 27
From that supernal judge , that stirs good thoughts In any breast of strong
authority , 3 To look into the blots and stains of right . That judge hath made me
guardian to this boy : Under whose warrant , I impeach thy wrong ; And , by
whose help , I ...
From that supernal judge , that stirs good thoughts In any breast of strong
authority , 3 To look into the blots and stains of right . That judge hath made me
guardian to this boy : Under whose warrant , I impeach thy wrong ; And , by
whose help , I ...
Side 30
The chief difficulty arises from this , that Constance having told Elinor of her fin -
conceiving womb , pursues the thought , and uses fin through the next lines in an
ambiguous fenfe , fometimes for crimè ; and sometimes for offspring He's not ...
The chief difficulty arises from this , that Constance having told Elinor of her fin -
conceiving womb , pursues the thought , and uses fin through the next lines in an
ambiguous fenfe , fometimes for crimè ; and sometimes for offspring He's not ...
Side 32
Our exclamations of applause are still borrowed , as bravo and encore .
JOHNSON . Dr. Johnfon's first thought , I believe , is best . So , in Beaumont and
Fletcher's Love's Cure , or The Martial Maid : Can I cry aim " To this against
myself ? " .
Our exclamations of applause are still borrowed , as bravo and encore .
JOHNSON . Dr. Johnfon's first thought , I believe , is best . So , in Beaumont and
Fletcher's Love's Cure , or The Martial Maid : Can I cry aim " To this against
myself ? " .
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The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes: With Corrections ..., Volum 7 William Shakespeare Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1778 |
The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes: With Corrections ..., Volum 5 William Shakespeare Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1778 |
The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes: With Corrections ..., Volum 7 William Shakespeare Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1778 |
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