The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, 第 12 卷R. C. and J. Rivington, 1821 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 64 筆
第 16 頁
... true , this god did shake : His coward lips did from their colour fly 5 ; And that same eye , whose bend doth awe the world , Did lose his lustre : I did hear him groan : Ay , and that tongue of his , that bade the Romans Mark him , and ...
... true , this god did shake : His coward lips did from their colour fly 5 ; And that same eye , whose bend doth awe the world , Did lose his lustre : I did hear him groan : Ay , and that tongue of his , that bade the Romans Mark him , and ...
第 22 頁
... true man . ] No honest man . The jury still are styled good men and true . MALONE . 5 a man of any occupation , ] Had I been a mechanick , one of the Plebeians to whom he offered his throat . JOHNSON . So , in Coriolanus , Act IV . Sc ...
... true man . ] No honest man . The jury still are styled good men and true . MALONE . 5 a man of any occupation , ] Had I been a mechanick , one of the Plebeians to whom he offered his throat . JOHNSON . So , in Coriolanus , Act IV . Sc ...
第 28 頁
... true cause , Why all these fires , why all these gliding ghosts , Why birds , and beasts , from quality and kind ; Why old men fools , and children calculate ' ; 5- thunder - stone : ] A stone fabulously supposed to be discharged by ...
... true cause , Why all these fires , why all these gliding ghosts , Why birds , and beasts , from quality and kind ; Why old men fools , and children calculate ' ; 5- thunder - stone : ] A stone fabulously supposed to be discharged by ...
第 31 頁
... true one . Menenius , in Coriolanus , says : " I have been always factionary on the part of your general ; " and the speaker , who is describing himself , would scarce have employed the word in its common and unfavourable sense ...
... true one . Menenius , in Coriolanus , says : " I have been always factionary on the part of your general ; " and the speaker , who is describing himself , would scarce have employed the word in its common and unfavourable sense ...
第 37 頁
... true judgment always led him to the safest guides , ( as we may see by those fine strokes in his Cato borrowed from the Philippics of Cicero , ) has paraphrased this fine description ; but we are no longer to expect those terrible ...
... true judgment always led him to the safest guides , ( as we may see by those fine strokes in his Cato borrowed from the Philippics of Cicero , ) has paraphrased this fine description ; but we are no longer to expect those terrible ...
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常見字詞
Agrippa Alexas Antony's bear blood BOSWELL Brutus CASCA Cassius CESAR CHAR Charmian CLEO Cleopatra Coriolanus Cymbeline death doth edition editors Egypt emendation Enobarbus EROS Exeunt Exit eyes fear fortune friends Fulvia give gods Hamlet hand hath hear heart honour IRAS JOHNSON Julius Cæsar King Henry King Lear Lepidus look lord Lucilius Lucius madam MALONE Mark Antony MASON means MESS Messala metre musick never night noble Octavia old copy old reading old translation passage play Plutarch poet Pompey pray Proculeius queen RITSON Roman Rome SCENE second folio sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies Sir Thomas Hanmer SOLD soldier speak speech spirit stand STEEVENS suppose sword tell thee Theobald thing thou art thou hast thought Timon of Athens Titinius translation of Plutarch Troilus and Cressida unto WARBURTON word