The English of Shakespeare: Illustrated in a Philological Commentary on His Julius CaesarE. Ginn, 1869 - 386 страници |
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Страница x
... speech numbered 117 ; the insertion of " not " after " Has he , " in that numbered 401 ; and the transposition of the two names Lu- cilius and Lucius in that numbered 520. The first and second of these three corrections are of little ...
... speech numbered 117 ; the insertion of " not " after " Has he , " in that numbered 401 ; and the transposition of the two names Lu- cilius and Lucius in that numbered 520. The first and second of these three corrections are of little ...
Страница xi
... speech , or at any rate is still perfectly intelligible and unam- biguous , and moe is sometimes the only form that will suit the exigencies of the verse . As for the present Commentary on the Play of Julius Cæsar , it will be perceived ...
... speech , or at any rate is still perfectly intelligible and unam- biguous , and moe is sometimes the only form that will suit the exigencies of the verse . As for the present Commentary on the Play of Julius Cæsar , it will be perceived ...
Страница xii
... speech has under- gone since his age . The English of the sixteenth century is in various respects a different language from that of the nineteenth . The words and con- structions are not throughout the same , and when they are they ...
... speech has under- gone since his age . The English of the sixteenth century is in various respects a different language from that of the nineteenth . The words and con- structions are not throughout the same , and when they are they ...
Страница xvii
... name in provin- cial speech was probably sounded Shackspeare or Shacksper ; but even in the poet's own day its more refined or literary pronunciation seems to have been the same ( 1 ) PROLEGOMENA SHAKESPEARE'S PERSONAL HISTORY.
... name in provin- cial speech was probably sounded Shackspeare or Shacksper ; but even in the poet's own day its more refined or literary pronunciation seems to have been the same ( 1 ) PROLEGOMENA SHAKESPEARE'S PERSONAL HISTORY.
Страница 21
... speech of Polixenes in the Third Scene of the Fourth Act of the Winter's Tale should run as follows ? - Nature is made better by no mean But nature makes that mean . Šo ever that art , Which you say adds to nature , is an art That ...
... speech of Polixenes in the Third Scene of the Fourth Act of the Winter's Tale should run as follows ? - Nature is made better by no mean But nature makes that mean . Šo ever that art , Which you say adds to nature , is an art That ...
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accent adverb annotator Antony and Cleopatra appear bear blood Cæs called Capitol Casca Cassius Chaucer Cicero Cinna Collier common commonly Compare conjecture Coriolanus death Decius dissyllable doth Dyce English Enter Exeunt expression fear formerly French give Hamlet hand hath hear heart hemistich Henry honor Hudson ides of March instance Julius Cæsar King language Latin look lord Lucilius Lucius Macbeth Malone Mark Antony meaning Merchant of Venice merely Messala Milton modern editors night notion Octavius old copies original edition original text passage perhaps Philippi phrase Pindarus Plutarch poet Portia present Play printed probably pronoun prosody reading regard Roman Rome Saxon SCENE Second Folio seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shrew signifying speak speare speech spirit stage direction stand Steevens substantive syllable thee thing thou tion Titinius verb verse White Winter's Tale word writers