The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite xxi
... friends at several doors , " and the prefixes to the speeches are 1 Lord , 2 Lord , and 3 Lord , where the course of the action renders it all but certain that Lucius , Lu- cullus , and Sempronius are the persons meant . These , be it ...
... friends at several doors , " and the prefixes to the speeches are 1 Lord , 2 Lord , and 3 Lord , where the course of the action renders it all but certain that Lucius , Lu- cullus , and Sempronius are the persons meant . These , be it ...
Seite xxii
... few of the author's particular friends , to whom transcripts of it had been pre- sented . " It is not our purpose to enter upon the " minute dis- cussion " which Mr. Dyce has left to others . xxii Introduction THE LIFE OF.
... few of the author's particular friends , to whom transcripts of it had been pre- sented . " It is not our purpose to enter upon the " minute dis- cussion " which Mr. Dyce has left to others . xxii Introduction THE LIFE OF.
Seite xxiii
... friends , and built him a house in the sea , by the isle of Pharos , and dwelt there as a man that banished himself from all men's company ; saying he would lead Timon's life , because he had the like wrong offered him that was before ...
... friends , and built him a house in the sea , by the isle of Pharos , and dwelt there as a man that banished himself from all men's company ; saying he would lead Timon's life , because he had the like wrong offered him that was before ...
Seite xxv
... friendship and hospitality , complaining that his godship has grown sleepy or indifferent ; so that he no longer punishes the baseness and ingratitude of men , but has suffered his firebrands to dwindle into nothing , a mere poetical ...
... friendship and hospitality , complaining that his godship has grown sleepy or indifferent ; so that he no longer punishes the baseness and ingratitude of men , but has suffered his firebrands to dwindle into nothing , a mere poetical ...
Seite xxvi
... friends happy , am now left poor and destitute : those , who once adored me and hung upon my nod , will not so much as look upon me ; but if I chance to meet any of them , they pass by me , as if they had never seen me , or turn away as ...
... friends happy , am now left poor and destitute : those , who once adored me and hung upon my nod , will not so much as look upon me ; but if I chance to meet any of them , they pass by me , as if they had never seen me , or turn away as ...
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Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Aufidius banished bear Brutus Caius Marcius Citizens Collier Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus Corioli dost enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear flatter Flav Flavius folio follow fool fortune friends give gods gold hand Hanmer hate hath hear heart honest honor ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Julius Cæsar ladies Lart live look Lord Timon Lucullus Menenius misanthropy mother nature ne'er never noble patricians peace Phrynia play plebeians Plutarch Plutus Poet Poet's pray pride prithee revenge Roman Rome scene Senators servant Shakespeare Sicinius slaves soldiers speak spirit stand Steevens sword Tarpeian rock tell thee There's thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tion Titus Lartius tribunes Tullus unto Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia words worthy