The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, Volume 13 |
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Page 5
The thought is this ; we are not now ( as we were wont ) influenced by the weather , but by the king's looks . ... they wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's look , but hath a heart that is " Glad at the thing they scowl at .
The thought is this ; we are not now ( as we were wont ) influenced by the weather , but by the king's looks . ... they wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's look , but hath a heart that is " Glad at the thing they scowl at .
Page 6
That is , " Still look as the king does ; " or , as he expresses it a little differently afterwards : 66 wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's look . " TYRWHITT . The only error that I can find ...
That is , " Still look as the king does ; " or , as he expresses it a little differently afterwards : 66 wear their faces to the bent " Of the king's look . " TYRWHITT . The only error that I can find ...
Page 7
He , that hath lost her , too : so is the queen , That most desir'd the match : But not a courtier , Although they wear their faces to the bent Of the king's looks , hath a heart that is not Glad at the thing they scowl at . 2 GENT .
He , that hath lost her , too : so is the queen , That most desir'd the match : But not a courtier , Although they wear their faces to the bent Of the king's looks , hath a heart that is not Glad at the thing they scowl at . 2 GENT .
Page 10
So , in The Tempest : 66 look , how well my garments sit upon me , " Much feater than before . ' To feat , therefore , may be a verb meaning - to render nice , exact . By the dress of Posthumus , even the more mature cour- tiers ...
So , in The Tempest : 66 look , how well my garments sit upon me , " Much feater than before . ' To feat , therefore , may be a verb meaning - to render nice , exact . By the dress of Posthumus , even the more mature cour- tiers ...
Page 13
Nay , stay a little : Were you but riding forth to air yourself , Such parting were too petty . Look here , love ; This diamond was my mother's : take it , heart ; But keep it till you woo another wife , When Imogen is dead . POST .
Nay , stay a little : Were you but riding forth to air yourself , Such parting were too petty . Look here , love ; This diamond was my mother's : take it , heart ; But keep it till you woo another wife , When Imogen is dead . POST .
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Common terms and phrases
answer APEM Apemantus appears Athens believe better called Cloten comes common Cymbeline dead death edition editors emendation Enter Exit expression eyes false fear folio fool fortune give given gods gold hand Hanmer hath hear heart heaven Henry honour IACH Imogen Italy JOHNSON keep kind King lady leave less live look lord MALONE MASON master means Measure metre mind mistress nature never noble observed occurs old copy once passage Perhaps person play poet poor POST Posthumus present Queen Roman says SCENE seems seen Senators sense SERV servant Shakspeare speak speech stand STEEVENS suppose sure tell thee thing Thomas thou thou art thought Timon true villain WARBURTON