The Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare: King Lear. All's well that ends well |
Inni boken
Side 68
Let it stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth ; With cadent tears * 6 fret channels in
her cheeks ; * Quartos , accent tears . 2 Of what hath mov ' d you . ] Omitted in the
quartos . STEEVENS . 3 — from her DEROGATE body - ] Derogate , for unnatural
...
Let it stamp wrinkles in her brow of youth ; With cadent tears * 6 fret channels in
her cheeks ; * Quartos , accent tears . 2 Of what hath mov ' d you . ] Omitted in the
quartos . STEEVENS . 3 — from her DEROGATE body - ] Derogate , for unnatural
...
Side 206
Ay , sir ; she took them , read them in my presence ; And now and then an ample
tear trilld down Her delicate cheek : it seem ' d , she was a queen . ... You have
seen Sunshine and rain at once : her smiles and tears Were like a better May ?
Ay , sir ; she took them , read them in my presence ; And now and then an ample
tear trilld down Her delicate cheek : it seem ' d , she was a queen . ... You have
seen Sunshine and rain at once : her smiles and tears Were like a better May ?
Side 208
STEEVENS . Doth not Dr . Warburton ' s alteration infer that Cordelia ' s sorrow
was superior to her patience ? But it seem ' d that she was a queen over her
passion ; and the smiles on her lip appeared not to know that tears were in her
eyes .
STEEVENS . Doth not Dr . Warburton ' s alteration infer that Cordelia ' s sorrow
was superior to her patience ? But it seem ' d that she was a queen over her
passion ; and the smiles on her lip appeared not to know that tears were in her
eyes .
Side 314
And these great tears 5 grace his remembrance more Than those I shed for him .
What was he like ? I have forgot him : my imagination Carries no favour in ' t , but
Bertram ' s . I am undone : there is no living , none , If Bertram be away . It were ...
And these great tears 5 grace his remembrance more Than those I shed for him .
What was he like ? I have forgot him : my imagination Carries no favour in ' t , but
Bertram ' s . I am undone : there is no living , none , If Bertram be away . It were ...
Side 347
The mystery of your loneliness , and find Your salt tears ' head ' . Now to all sense
' tis gross , You love my son ; invention is asham ' d , Against the proclamation of
thy passion , To say , thou dost not : therefore tell me true ; But tell me then , ' tis ...
The mystery of your loneliness , and find Your salt tears ' head ' . Now to all sense
' tis gross , You love my son ; invention is asham ' d , Against the proclamation of
thy passion , To say , thou dost not : therefore tell me true ; But tell me then , ' tis ...
Hva folk mener - Skriv en omtale
Vi har ikke funnet noen omtaler på noen av de vanlige stedene.
Andre utgaver - Vis alle
The Plays and Poems of William Shakespeare, Volum 8 William Shakespeare Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1790 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
ancient answer appears believe Bertram better Boswell bring called comes common Cordelia Corn Count daughter death duke Edgar edition editors Enter expression eyes fair fall father fear folio fool fortune France give Gloster grace hand hast hath head hear heart Henry hold honour Italy Johnson Kent kind King knave lady LEAR leave less live look lord madam MALONE Mason master meaning nature never night noble observed old copy omitted Parolles passage perhaps person play poor pray present quartos reason scene seems sense serve Shakspeare signifies speak speech stand STEEVENS suppose tears tell thee thing thou thought true WARBURTON wife word young