The dramatic works, Volum 8Tegg, 1833 |
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Resultat 1-5 av 77
Side 3
... follows : - Timon ; Laches , his faithful servant . Eutrapelus , a dissolute young man . Gelasimus , a cittie heyre . Pseudocheus , a lying traveller . Demeas , an orator . Philargurus , a covetous churlish old man . Hermogenes , a ...
... follows : - Timon ; Laches , his faithful servant . Eutrapelus , a dissolute young man . Gelasimus , a cittie heyre . Pseudocheus , a lying traveller . Demeas , an orator . Philargurus , a covetous churlish old man . Hermogenes , a ...
Side 9
... follow'd ! pass over . Poet . The senators of Athens : -Happy men ! Pain . Look , more ! Poet . You see this confluence , this great flood of visitors13 , I have , in this rough work , shap'd out a man , Whom this beneath world14 doth ...
... follow'd ! pass over . Poet . The senators of Athens : -Happy men ! Pain . Look , more ! Poet . You see this confluence , this great flood of visitors13 , I have , in this rough work , shap'd out a man , Whom this beneath world14 doth ...
Side 11
... Follow his strides , his lobbies fill with tendance , Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ears23 , Make sacred even his stirrop , and through him Drink the free air24 . Pain . Ay , marry , what of these ? Poet . When Fortune , in her ...
... Follow his strides , his lobbies fill with tendance , Rain sacrificial whisperings in his ears23 , Make sacred even his stirrop , and through him Drink the free air24 . Pain . Ay , marry , what of these ? Poet . When Fortune , in her ...
Side 22
... follows look ill , to its present place . I think with Malone that many of the speeches in this play , which are now exhibited in a loose and imperfect kind of metre , were intended by Shakspeare for prose , in which form they are ...
... follows look ill , to its present place . I think with Malone that many of the speeches in this play , which are now exhibited in a loose and imperfect kind of metre , were intended by Shakspeare for prose , in which form they are ...
Side 26
... follow it ] . That man might not become wretched for his uobleness of soul . ' 24 i . e . prefer it , raise it to honour by wearing it . The Jew- eller says to Timon in the preceding scene , You mend the jewel by wearing it . ' Flav I ...
... follow it ] . That man might not become wretched for his uobleness of soul . ' 24 i . e . prefer it , raise it to honour by wearing it . The Jew- eller says to Timon in the preceding scene , You mend the jewel by wearing it . ' Flav I ...
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Alcib Alcibiades Antium Antony and Cleopatra Apem Apemantus Athens Aufidius bear blood Brutus Cæs Caius Casca Cassius CESAR Char Charmian Cleo Cleopatra Cominius Coriolanus death dost doth Egypt enemy ENOBARBUS Eros Exeunt Exit eyes fear Flav follow fool fortune friends Fulvia give gods gold hand hath hear heart honour i'the Iras Julius Cæsar King Henry lady Lart Lepidus look lord LUCILIUS Lucius madam Malone Marcius Mark Antony means Menenius Mess ne'er never noble o'the Octavia old copy reads Othello passage peace Plutarch poet Pompey pr'ythee pray queen Re-enter Roman Rome SCENE senators Serv Servant Shakspeare Shakspeare's soldier speak stand Steevens sword tell thee There's thine thing thou art thou hast Timon Titinius Troilus and Cressida unto Volces VOLUMNIA word worthy