The English of Shakespeare: Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius Caesar |
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Страница xi
The words and constructions are not throughout the same , and when they are they have not always the same meaning . Much of Shakespeare's vocabulary has ceased to fall from either our lips or our pens ; much of the meaning which he ...
The words and constructions are not throughout the same , and when they are they have not always the same meaning . Much of Shakespeare's vocabulary has ceased to fall from either our lips or our pens ; much of the meaning which he ...
Страница 7
... All is well ended , if this suit be won , That you express content . ” There would be no nature or meaning in the dialogue circling around the phrase in question , or continually returning upon it , in this way , unless it formed ...
... All is well ended , if this suit be won , That you express content . ” There would be no nature or meaning in the dialogue circling around the phrase in question , or continually returning upon it , in this way , unless it formed ...
Страница 18
Any one who should talk of the entrance of a man , or of a lion , or of a dog , meaning the mouth , would 110t be understood . So in Latin we have the entrance to river very often called its os , but nowhere the mouth of any living ...
Any one who should talk of the entrance of a man , or of a lion , or of a dog , meaning the mouth , would 110t be understood . So in Latin we have the entrance to river very often called its os , but nowhere the mouth of any living ...
Страница 19
... as signifying the lips ( and children ) of the soil , —which would leave the epithet “ thirsty ” without meaning I do not think , therefore , that there is any other known reading which can compete with that of the Dering MS .
... as signifying the lips ( and children ) of the soil , —which would leave the epithet “ thirsty ” without meaning I do not think , therefore , that there is any other known reading which can compete with that of the Dering MS .
Страница 72
Why should not the poet be supposed sometimes , when he begins a new sentence or paragraph in this manner , to intend that it should be connected , in the prosody as well as in the meaning , with what follows , not with what precedes ?
Why should not the poet be supposed sometimes , when he begins a new sentence or paragraph in this manner , to intend that it should be connected , in the prosody as well as in the meaning , with what follows , not with what precedes ?
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according annotator answer Antony appear authority bear believe better blood Brutus Cæsar called Casca Cassius Collier common commonly correction death doth doubt edition editors English Enter evidently expression fall fear Folio French German give given hand hath head hear heart Henry hold honour instance Julius Cæsar kind King language Latin least live look lord lost Lucius manner March Mark matter meaning merely mind natural nearly never night noble observed occurs old copies once original passage perhaps person Play present printed probably pronounced reading reason regard remarkable Roman Rome scene Second seems sense Shakespeare signifying slight sometimes speak speech spirit stage direction stand strong supposed syllable taken tell thee thing Third thou thought tion true verb verse word writers