Romeo and JulietThe Arden Shakespeare has long been acclaimed as the established scholarly edition of Shakespeare's work. Now being totally reedited for the third time, Arden editions offer the very best in contemporary scholarship. Each volume provides a clear and authoritative text, edited to the highest standards; detailed textual notes and commentary on the same page of the text; full contextual, illustrated introduction, including an in-depth survey of critical and performance approaches to the play; and selected bibliography. |
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Page 26
... play no later than the spring of 1596. In fact it has been usual to assign the play to 1595.1 There are no allusions to it before 1598.2 The earliest date that has been seriously proposed for first performance is 1591 , at about the ...
... play no later than the spring of 1596. In fact it has been usual to assign the play to 1595.1 There are no allusions to it before 1598.2 The earliest date that has been seriously proposed for first performance is 1591 , at about the ...
Page 54
... play's scenes are composed in a temporal rhythm of which the movements conclude in dawn . At the beginning of the play , before he enters , Romeo is described walking in a grove of sycamore at dawn ; the second dawn rises as he leaves ...
... play's scenes are composed in a temporal rhythm of which the movements conclude in dawn . At the beginning of the play , before he enters , Romeo is described walking in a grove of sycamore at dawn ; the second dawn rises as he leaves ...
Page 214
... play ' Heart's ease ' . Peter . O musicians , because my heart itself plays ' My heart is full ' . O play me some merry dump to 105 comfort me . I Mus . Not a dump we ! ' Tis no time to play now . Peter . You will not then ? Peter . I ...
... play ' Heart's ease ' . Peter . O musicians , because my heart itself plays ' My heart is full ' . O play me some merry dump to 105 comfort me . I Mus . Not a dump we ! ' Tis no time to play now . Peter . You will not then ? Peter . I ...
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Common terms and phrases
art thou Astrophil Bad Quarto banished bawdy quibble Benvolio brawl Brooke Brooke's Capell Comedy compositor conj Cupid dead death doth Dover Wilson Dr Johnson dream earth edited Enter ROMEO Exeunt Exit eyes fair father feast foul papers frend Friar Laurence fryer give Greg hand hart hast hath heart heaven hence Hosley Lady Cap Lady Capulet light lines live lord Love's Love's Labour's Lost lovers lyfe maid Mantua manuscript married Mercutio misreading Montague mynde night nurce Nurse Nurse's Paris Peter phrase play poem Pope Prince Proverbial Q2 compositor Queen Mab quoth Romeo and Juliet Romeus Rowe scene sense Shakespeare sonnet speak speech prefix stage direction Steevens subst sweet tears tell tender thee theyr thou art Tilley tomb Tybalt unto Verona wife William Shakespeare Williams word ΙΟ