The Tragedy of Richard III, with the Landing of Earle Richmond, and the Battell at Bosworth FieldClassic Books Company, 2001 - 500 sider |
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Side viii
... doubt its actual existence . MALONE is the earliest to assign a Date of Composition to the present play , and placed it in 1597 , in the same year with the First Quarto . Thus it appears in his Chronological Order of all the plays , in ...
... doubt its actual existence . MALONE is the earliest to assign a Date of Composition to the present play , and placed it in 1597 , in the same year with the First Quarto . Thus it appears in his Chronological Order of all the plays , in ...
Side 4
... doubt that the mis- take was Shakespeare's , and an editor is not justifiable in substituting what his author should have written for what he did write . But as the personage in ques- tion is called Stanley thirteen times during the ...
... doubt that the mis- take was Shakespeare's , and an editor is not justifiable in substituting what his author should have written for what he did write . But as the personage in ques- tion is called Stanley thirteen times during the ...
Side 18
... doubt that by the ' lascivious pleasing of a lute , ' he is directly alluded to . The subsequent description likewise that Richard gives of himself is in comparison with the king . Johnson thought the image of ' war capering ' poetical ...
... doubt that by the ' lascivious pleasing of a lute , ' he is directly alluded to . The subsequent description likewise that Richard gives of himself is in comparison with the king . Johnson thought the image of ' war capering ' poetical ...
Side 30
... doubt , I think , that the copy which the corrector used , at least as far as this passage is concerned , was one of the later Qq , probably the Third . [ By ' the corrector ' Pickersgill here refers to the author of certain changes in ...
... doubt , I think , that the copy which the corrector used , at least as far as this passage is concerned , was one of the later Qq , probably the Third . [ By ' the corrector ' Pickersgill here refers to the author of certain changes in ...
Side 38
... doubt , an intentional ambiguity in the phrase . Richard intends Clarence to take it in the sense , ' afflicts me more profoundly , ' but it may also mean ' concerns me more ' ; probably in the sense , ' I had more hand in it than you ...
... doubt , an intentional ambiguity in the phrase . Richard intends Clarence to take it in the sense , ' afflicts me more profoundly , ' but it may also mean ' concerns me more ' ; probably in the sense , ' I had more hand in it than you ...
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Almindelige termer og sætninger
ABBOTT Anne blood brother Buck Buckingham Catesby character Clarence Coll Compare conj corrector crown death Dorset doth dramatic Duke duke of Gloucester Dyce Earle Earle Richmond Edward Edward IV Elizabeth Enter euery Exeunt Exit felfe Folio giue Gloucester grace Hastings hath haue Henry Henry VI Holinshed house of York Huds King Richard Ktly kyng Lady leaue liue Lord Lord Stanley loue Macbeth MALONE Margaret meaning mother murder MURRAY N. E. D. s. v. murther neuer noble passage play Pope present line Prince protectour Q₁ Q₂ Qq et cet QQ₂ Quarto Queen quoted Ratcliffe reading Rich Richard III Richmond Riuers Rlfe Rowe et seq says scene sense Shakespeare ſhall Sing sonne speech Stanley Steev STEEVENS subs thee Theob thou thought Tower Trans True Tragedie Varr Vaughan vnto vpon Warb word WRIGHT York
Populære passager
Side 21 - And so I was, which plainly signified That I should snarl, and bite, and play the dog. Then, since the heavens have shap'd my body so, Let hell make crook'd my mind to answer it. I have no brother, I am like no brother; And this word 'love,' which greybeards call divine, Be resident in men like one another, And not in me!