The Comedies, Histories, Tragedies, and Poems of William Shakspere: Poems. Ascribed plays. IndexesC. Knight, 1844 |
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Page 14
... sense of throw aside ; as Malone explains it , " Contemptuously refuse this favour . " " Intendments - intentions . So in Othello , ' Act IV . , Scene 2 : - " I have said nothing but what I protest intendment of doing . " The word ...
... sense of throw aside ; as Malone explains it , " Contemptuously refuse this favour . " " Intendments - intentions . So in Othello , ' Act IV . , Scene 2 : - " I have said nothing but what I protest intendment of doing . " The word ...
Page 21
... sense of feeling were bereft me , And that I could not see , nor hear , nor touch , And nothing but the very smell were left me , Yet would my love to thee be still as much ; For from the still'tory of thy face excelling Comes breath ...
... sense of feeling were bereft me , And that I could not see , nor hear , nor touch , And nothing but the very smell were left me , Yet would my love to thee be still as much ; For from the still'tory of thy face excelling Comes breath ...
Page 22
... . He wrings her nose , he strikes her on the cheeks , He bends her fingers , holds her pulses hard ; a Flaws is here used in the sense of violent blasts . He chafes her lips , a thousand ways he seeks 22 VENUS AND ADONIS .
... . He wrings her nose , he strikes her on the cheeks , He bends her fingers , holds her pulses hard ; a Flaws is here used in the sense of violent blasts . He chafes her lips , a thousand ways he seeks 22 VENUS AND ADONIS .
Page 36
... senses , and her spright confounds . For now she knows it is no gentle chase , But the blunt boar , rough bear , or lion proud , Because the cry remaineth in one place , Where fearfully the dogs exclaim aloud : Finding their enemy to be ...
... senses , and her spright confounds . For now she knows it is no gentle chase , But the blunt boar , rough bear , or lion proud , Because the cry remaineth in one place , Where fearfully the dogs exclaim aloud : Finding their enemy to be ...
Page 59
... , he doth despise Confounds . Malone interprets this as destroys ; but the meaning is sufficiently clear if we accept confounds in its usual sense . His naked armour of still - slaughter'd lust , And THE RAPE OF LUCRECE . 59.
... , he doth despise Confounds . Malone interprets this as destroys ; but the meaning is sufficiently clear if we accept confounds in its usual sense . His naked armour of still - slaughter'd lust , And THE RAPE OF LUCRECE . 59.
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The Comedies, Histories, Tragedies, and Poems of William Shakspere:, Volume 3 William Shakespeare,Charles Knight No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
A. L. iii Arden bear beauty beauty's blood breath character cheeks Collatine dead dear death doth dramatic eyes F. P. ii face fair fair Em false father faults fear Fletcher flowers foul gentle give grace grief hand hath hear heart heaven honour husband king kiss lady live Locrine look lord love's Lucrece M. M. ii Malone master mayst mind mistress Mosbie Mucedorus never night Noble Kinsmen North's Plutarch Oldcastle passage Passionate Pilgrim pity play poem poet poor praise queen quoth scene Shakspere Shakspere's shame Sir John Oldcastle Sonnets sorrow soul speak spirit stand stanzas swear sweet Tarquin tears tell thee thine things Thomas Lord Cromwell thou art thou hast thought thyself Time's tongue true truth unto Venus and Adonis verse weep wife words writer Yorkshire Tragedy youth