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 . " We no more obey the heavens [ the sky ] than our courtiers " obey the heavens [ God ] . By which it appears that the ...
The thought is this ; we are not now ( as we were wont ) influenced by the weather , but by the king's looks . " We no more obey the heavens [ the sky ] than our courtiers " obey the heavens [ God ] . By which it appears that the ...
Page 6
Šc . IV . is the same thought : subject to your countenance , glad , or sorry , 66 " As I saw it inclin'd . " Again , in Greene's Never Too Late , 4to . 1590 : " if the King smiled , every one in the court was in his jollitie ; if he ...
Šc . IV . is the same thought : subject to your countenance , glad , or sorry , 66 " As I saw it inclin'd . " Again , in Greene's Never Too Late , 4to . 1590 : " if the King smiled , every one in the court was in his jollitie ; if he ...
Page 8
Again , in The Winter's Tale : " The report of her is extended more than can be thought . " MALONE . Perhaps this passage may be somewhat illustrated by the fol- lowing lines in Troilus and Cressida , Act III . Sc . III .
Again , in The Winter's Tale : " The report of her is extended more than can be thought . " MALONE . Perhaps this passage may be somewhat illustrated by the fol- lowing lines in Troilus and Cressida , Act III . Sc . III .
Page 14
Shakspeare there- fore certainly might have had that practice in his thoughts . MALONE . 7 While sense can keep IT on ! ] This expression , I suppose , means , " while sense can maintain its operations ; while sense continues to have ...
Shakspeare there- fore certainly might have had that practice in his thoughts . MALONE . 7 While sense can keep IT on ! ] This expression , I suppose , means , " while sense can maintain its operations ; while sense continues to have ...
Page 22
A thought resembling this , occurs in All's Well That Ends Well : " Like a remorseful pardon slowly carried . " STEEVENS . 3 — with THIS eye or ear- ] [ Old copy - his eye , & c . ] But how could Posthumus make himself distinguished ...
A thought resembling this , occurs in All's Well That Ends Well : " Like a remorseful pardon slowly carried . " STEEVENS . 3 — with THIS eye or ear- ] [ Old copy - his eye , & c . ] But how could Posthumus make himself distinguished ...
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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