Remarks on Shakespeare's Versification |
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Page 6
... mind ; the mind is not always in the humour to be exerted , or not in the same way ; he might be careless or in a hurry - he might be uneasy , un- comfortable . But he might , also , have a different aim and object and turn of mind in ...
... mind ; the mind is not always in the humour to be exerted , or not in the same way ; he might be careless or in a hurry - he might be uneasy , un- comfortable . But he might , also , have a different aim and object and turn of mind in ...
Page 66
... mind is more fully brought out before us . But though it springs from a melancholy mind , he must have taken great plea- sure in writing it ; at least , all the principal , and earlier , part of it . The two plays resemble one another ...
... mind is more fully brought out before us . But though it springs from a melancholy mind , he must have taken great plea- sure in writing it ; at least , all the principal , and earlier , part of it . The two plays resemble one another ...
Page 67
... mind very strongly , its deep possession with the dreadful ideas and duties that have been im- pressed upon it . Still more , perhaps , the following : - You are merry , my lord . Who ? I ? O God ! your only jig - maker . He would be ...
... mind very strongly , its deep possession with the dreadful ideas and duties that have been im- pressed upon it . Still more , perhaps , the following : - You are merry , my lord . Who ? I ? O God ! your only jig - maker . He would be ...
Common terms and phrases
accented acted beautiful Ben Jonson blank verse blood break broken Cæsar cæsura called character Collier comedy Comedy of Errors comic conceits Coriolanus crown curious Cymbeline death delight doth double endings dramatic dull effect enumerative eyes Falstaff fancy Farewell father feeling Fletcher flowing fourth style friends gentle Hamlet hand hath hear heart heaven Henry IV Henry VI Henry VIII honour imitation instance Jonson Julius Cæsar kind King lines long speeches look lord Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth Malone Marlow means merely Merry Wives metre mind nature never night observed old play Oldcastle Othello passage perhaps poems poet poetical poetry poor praise printed prose remarkable rhyme Richard Richard II Romeo scene seems Shake Shakespeare soliloquy sometimes Sonnets soul speak spirit sweet syllable taste tell thee thine thou art thou hast thought tongue Tybalt unbroken unto versification weak endings words writer written