Shakespear Illustrated: Or, The Novels and Histories, on which the Plays of Shakespear are Founded. Collected and Translated from the Original Authors. With Critical Remarks ...A. Millar, 1754 |
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Page 7
... fhall be the laft of thy Life ; fhall my Vengeance ftop here ; thy wretched Offspring fhall feel the Fury of my just Re- fentment ; they both fhall languish with the Pangs of hopeless Love , and be the Victims of that Power thou haft ...
... fhall be the laft of thy Life ; fhall my Vengeance ftop here ; thy wretched Offspring fhall feel the Fury of my just Re- fentment ; they both fhall languish with the Pangs of hopeless Love , and be the Victims of that Power thou haft ...
Page 12
... give you an Idea of the Pangs I fuffered in his Abfence ! Strangers as ye are to the icit Tyranny of Love , how fhall I make you · B 6 com- comprehend the Torments divided Lovers feel ? I found them 12 Shakespear Illuftrated .
... give you an Idea of the Pangs I fuffered in his Abfence ! Strangers as ye are to the icit Tyranny of Love , how fhall I make you · B 6 com- comprehend the Torments divided Lovers feel ? I found them 12 Shakespear Illuftrated .
Page 21
... fhall free me at once from thy fcorn , and the Upbraidings of my own conscious Mind . " Saying this , he flew into an adjoining Apartment , making faft the Door after her , which left me not the Poffibility of pursuing her , if I had ...
... fhall free me at once from thy fcorn , and the Upbraidings of my own conscious Mind . " Saying this , he flew into an adjoining Apartment , making faft the Door after her , which left me not the Poffibility of pursuing her , if I had ...
Page 42
... fhall not henceforth trouble me ; Here is a Coil with Proteftation . [ tears it . Go , get you gone ; and let the Papers lye ; You would be fingering them to anger me . LUCETTA . She makes it ftrange , but fhe would be best pleas'd To ...
... fhall not henceforth trouble me ; Here is a Coil with Proteftation . [ tears it . Go , get you gone ; and let the Papers lye ; You would be fingering them to anger me . LUCETTA . She makes it ftrange , but fhe would be best pleas'd To ...
Page 43
... LUCETTA . Madam , Dinner is ready , and your Father stays . JULIA . Well , let us go . LUCETTA . What , fhall these Papers lye like Tell - tales 1 here ? JULIA . If thou refpect them , best to take JULIA . Shakespear Illuftrated . 43.
... LUCETTA . Madam , Dinner is ready , and your Father stays . JULIA . Well , let us go . LUCETTA . What , fhall these Papers lye like Tell - tales 1 here ? JULIA . If thou refpect them , best to take JULIA . Shakespear Illuftrated . 43.
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Shakespear Illustrated: Or the Novels and Histories, on Which the Plays of ... Charlotte Lennox No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
Accufation againſt alfo almoſt Anſwer Antenor Ariodant becauſe Bolingbroke Borachio Cardinal Caufe Cauſe Chamber Claudio clofely cloſely Cordelia Court Creffida Crown Daughter Death Defire Defpair Diomede Don Felix Duke Duke of Albany faid fame Father fatisfied fave Favour feek feemed fent fhall fhew fhould fince firft flain fome foon fpeak France Friend ftand ftill fuch fuffer Geneura Grace Grief hath Heart Hector Hero herſelf Hiftorian Hiftory himſelf Holingfhed Honour Houſe Hugh Capet JULIA King Henry King Lear King Richard King's Lady laft Lear lefs Leonato Lord Lord Chamberlain Love Lover LUCETTA Madam Mafter moft moſt muſt myſelf Night noble paffed Paffion Pandarus Perfon Play pleaſe Pleaſure Prefence Priam Prifoner Prince Princefs promiſed Protheus Queen quoth racter Reaſon refolved Rinaldo Shakespear ſhall ſhe Silvia Soul ſpeak TALBOT thee thefe theſe thofe thoſe thou thouſand Thurio Treach Troilus Troy unto VALENTINE whofe WOLSEY yourſelf
Popular passages
Page 231 - He would fay Untruths, and be ever double Both in his Words and Meaning. He "was never, But where he meant to ruin, pitiful. His Promifes were, as he then was, mighty ;, But his Performance, as he now is, nothing.. Of his own Body he was ill, and gave The Clergy ill Example
Page 139 - not, if Men my Garments wear; Such outward Things dwell not in my Defire .But, if it be a Sin to covet Honour, I am the moft offending Soul alive. No, faith, my Lord, wifh not a Man from England; God's
Page 136 - Was re-united to the Crown of France. So that, as clear as is the Summer's Sun, King Pepin's Title, and Hugh Capet's Claim> King Lewis, his Satisfaction, all appear To hold in Right and Title of the Female : So do the Kings of France until this Day. Howbeit, they would hold up this
Page 197 - Be patient yet. QUEEN, I will, when you are humble: Nay, before;' Or God will punifh me. I do believe, Induc'd by potent Circumftances, that You are mine Enemy and make my Challenge; You fhall not be my Judge. For it is you Have blown this Coal betwixt my Lord and me; Which God's
Page 140 - through That he, which hath no Stomach to this Fight, Let him depart; his Pafiport fhall be made, And crowns for convoy put into his Purfe: We would not die in that Man's Company, That fears his Fellowfhip to die with us.
Page 135 - four hundred one and twenty Years After Defundtion of King Pharamond, (Idly fuppos'd the Founder of this Law) W^ho died within the Year of our Redemption Four hundred twenty-fix ; and Charles the Great Subdu'd the Saxons, and did feat the French Beyond the River Sala, in the Year Eight hundred five : Befides, their Writers fay, King
Page 161 - is your darling Rutland? Look, York, I ftain'd this Napkin with the Blood That valiant Clifford, with his Rapier's Point, Made iflue from the Bofom of the Boy: And if thine Eyes can water for his Death I give thee this to dry thy Cheeks withal. Alas poor York I but that I hate thee deadly I
Page 211 - Moft honour'd Madam, My Lord of York out of his noble Nature Zeal and Obedience he ftill bore your Grace, Forgetting, like a good Man, your late Cenfure Both of his Truth and him (which was too far) Offers, as I do, in a Sign of Peace His Service and his
Page 232 - to much Honour, from his Cradle;. He was a Scholar, and a ripe and good One; Exceeding wife, fair fpoken, and perfuading; Lofty and four to them that lov'd him not; But to thofe Men,, that
Page 197 - Your Pleafure, Madam ? QUEEN. Sir, I am about to weep; but thinking that We are a Queen, or long have dream'd fo ; - certain The Daughter of a King; my Drops of Tears I'll turn to Sparks of Fire. WOLSEY. Be patient yet. QUEEN,