The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, Том 12 |
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Стр. 16
But the false expression was for the sake of as false a piece of wit : a poor quibble , alluding to a coward flying from his colours . WARBURTON . 6 feeble temper- ] i . e . temperament , constitution . STEEVENS .
But the false expression was for the sake of as false a piece of wit : a poor quibble , alluding to a coward flying from his colours . WARBURTON . 6 feeble temper- ] i . e . temperament , constitution . STEEVENS .
Стр. 26
Glar'd certainly is to our ears a more forcible expression ; I have however adopted a reading proposed by Dr. Johnson , gaz'd ; induced by the following passage in Stowe's Chronicle , 1615 , from which the word gaze seems in our ...
Glar'd certainly is to our ears a more forcible expression ; I have however adopted a reading proposed by Dr. Johnson , gaz'd ; induced by the following passage in Stowe's Chronicle , 1615 , from which the word gaze seems in our ...
Стр. 34
This was a common expression of impatience in Shakspeare's time . So , Richard II . Act I. Sc . I. : " When Harry ? when ? " MALONE . 8 REMORSE from power : ] Remorse , for mercy . WARBURTON . Remorse ( says Mr. Heath ) signifies the ...
This was a common expression of impatience in Shakspeare's time . So , Richard II . Act I. Sc . I. : " When Harry ? when ? " MALONE . 8 REMORSE from power : ] Remorse , for mercy . WARBURTON . Remorse ( says Mr. Heath ) signifies the ...
Стр. 45
In Macbeth it signifies , as Dr. Johnson has observed , to shuffle with ambiguous expressions : and , indeed , here also it may mean to shuffle ; for he whose actions do not correspond with his promises is properly called a shuffler .
In Macbeth it signifies , as Dr. Johnson has observed , to shuffle with ambiguous expressions : and , indeed , here also it may mean to shuffle ; for he whose actions do not correspond with his promises is properly called a shuffler .
Стр. 50
... is nothing more than leading , fixed , predominant opinion . JOHNSON . Main opinion , according to Johnson's explanation , is sense ; but mean opinion would be a more natural expression , and is , I believe , what Shakspeare ...
... is nothing more than leading , fixed , predominant opinion . JOHNSON . Main opinion , according to Johnson's explanation , is sense ; but mean opinion would be a more natural expression , and is , I believe , what Shakspeare ...
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Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
ancient answer Antony appears bear become believe better blood body Brutus Cæsar called CASCA Cassius cause CHAR CLEO Cleopatra common dead death doth edition editors Egypt Enobarbus Enter EROS Exeunt Exit expression eyes face fear folio fortune friends give given gods hand hast hath hear heart hold honour Italy JOHNSON King King Henry leave live look lord madam MALONE Mark MASON matter means mind nature never night noble observed old copy once passage perhaps play Plutarch poet present queen Roman Rome SCENE seems sense Shakspeare SOLD speak speech spirit stand STEEVENS suppose sure sword tell thee thing thou thought translation true turn unto WARBURTON wish word