Remarks on Shakespeare's Versification |
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Page 4
... passages may be , the absence of that entire boldness and freedom , which so singularly , according to common ideas , goes with quite unbroken passages , not unfrequently , in what I have marked as his second style . To this last King ...
... passages may be , the absence of that entire boldness and freedom , which so singularly , according to common ideas , goes with quite unbroken passages , not unfrequently , in what I have marked as his second style . To this last King ...
Page 35
... passage , " That Falstaffe , varlet vile , ' etc. , which will not admit of Oldcastle , but must always have been Falstaff . The same thing is true of three passages in the Second Part of Henry IV . , as printed 1600 . Now , Falstaff ...
... passage , " That Falstaffe , varlet vile , ' etc. , which will not admit of Oldcastle , but must always have been Falstaff . The same thing is true of three passages in the Second Part of Henry IV . , as printed 1600 . Now , Falstaff ...
Page 150
... passages as to the date , we must inquire , not when the play was first acted , but when it was first printed , and in what form . This or that passage may have been added , after the play was in existence as a whole . Another thing to ...
... passages as to the date , we must inquire , not when the play was first acted , but when it was first printed , and in what form . This or that passage may have been added , after the play was in existence as a whole . Another thing to ...
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