Keats's Shakespeare: A Descriptive Study |
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Page 159
... Troy . You are for dreames & slumbers brother Priest You furre your gloues with reason : Or like a Starre disorb'd . Nay , if we talke of Reason , And flye like chidden Mercurie from Ioue , Let's shut our gates and sleepe : Troy ...
... Troy . You are for dreames & slumbers brother Priest You furre your gloues with reason : Or like a Starre disorb'd . Nay , if we talke of Reason , And flye like chidden Mercurie from Ioue , Let's shut our gates and sleepe : Troy ...
Page 170
... Troy . Deere trouble not your selfe : the morne is cold . Troy . To bed , to bed : sleepe kill those pritty eyes , And giue as soft attachment to thy sences , As Infants empty of all thought . Troy . O Cressida ! but that the busie day ...
... Troy . Deere trouble not your selfe : the morne is cold . Troy . To bed , to bed : sleepe kill those pritty eyes , And giue as soft attachment to thy sences , As Infants empty of all thought . Troy . O Cressida ! but that the busie day ...
Page 178
... Troy . Brother , you haue a vice of mercy in you ; Which better fits a Lyon , then a man . Troy . Euen in the fanne and winde of your fair Sword : Troy . For th ' loue of all the gods Let's leaue the Hermit Pitty with our Mothers ; Troy ...
... Troy . Brother , you haue a vice of mercy in you ; Which better fits a Lyon , then a man . Troy . Euen in the fanne and winde of your fair Sword : Troy . For th ' loue of all the gods Let's leaue the Hermit Pitty with our Mothers ; Troy ...
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Keats's Shakespeare: A Descriptive Study Caroline Frances Eleanor Spurgeon No preview available - 1966 |
Common terms and phrases
Achil Agamemnon Antony and Cleopatra beauty breath Cæsar Caliban Char Charmian Cleo Cres death delight dost doth Duke ears earth Endymion Enter Euen euery Exeunt Exit eyes fair fairy fear folio edition giue Hampstead hand hath haue hear heart heaven Hect Hector hither imagination IRAS Isab Joseph Severn Keats KEATS'S NOTE Keats's script King Lear kiss letter lines look Lord loue Lucio marked master Measure for Measure Midsummer Night's Dream nature Nestor night noble PANDARUS passage Plate play poem poetry Pros Prospero Puck queen Re-enter ARIEL SCENE Severn Shakespeare Shakespearian side-marks sleep sonnet soule sound speak speech spirit strange sweet Sycorax tell Tempest thee thine thing thou art thou hast thou shalt thought Tita Titania TITUS ANDRONICUS tongue Troilus and Cressida Troy underlined Vlis volume weep winds Winter's Tale