The English of Shakespeare Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius Caesar, Том 70 |
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Страница vi
... ( 571 ) which , curiously enough , had never been previously noticed by
anybody , but has been silently ignored and departed from even by those of the
modern editors who have professed to adhere the most scrupulously to that
original text .
... ( 571 ) which , curiously enough , had never been previously noticed by
anybody , but has been silently ignored and departed from even by those of the
modern editors who have professed to adhere the most scrupulously to that
original text .
Страница xii
267 ) , and whatever may be the origin of the French besogne and besoin , and
the Italian bisogna and bisogno , there can , I conceive , be no doubt that our
business , which never ( at least in modern English ) means the condition or
quality of ...
267 ) , and whatever may be the origin of the French besogne and besoin , and
the Italian bisogna and bisogno , there can , I conceive , be no doubt that our
business , which never ( at least in modern English ) means the condition or
quality of ...
Страница 2
He was also , though perhaps never very wealthy , but rather always a struggling
man , possessed of some houses in Stratford , as well as of a small freehold
estate acquired by his marriage ; and his connexion with the Arden family would
...
He was also , though perhaps never very wealthy , but rather always a struggling
man , possessed of some houses in Stratford , as well as of a small freehold
estate acquired by his marriage ; and his connexion with the Arden family would
...
Страница 7
It is Helena's habitual word , and the thought that is never absent from her mind . “
All's well that ends well , ” she exclaims , in the fourth Scene of the Fourth Act ; “
Still the fine's the crown : Whate'er the course , the end is the renown .
It is Helena's habitual word , and the thought that is never absent from her mind . “
All's well that ends well , ” she exclaims , in the fourth Scene of the Fourth Act ; “
Still the fine's the crown : Whate'er the course , the end is the renown .
Страница 14
There is probably not a page in it which is not disfigured by many minute
inaccuracies and irregularities , such as never appear in modern printing . The
punctuation is throughout rude and negligent , even where it is not palpably
blundering .
There is probably not a page in it which is not disfigured by many minute
inaccuracies and irregularities , such as never appear in modern printing . The
punctuation is throughout rude and negligent , even where it is not palpably
blundering .
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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 expression fall fear Folio formerly French German give given hand hath head hear heart Henry hold honour instance Julius 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 phrase 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