A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: Macbeth. 1873J. B. Lippincott & Company, 1873 |
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Page x
... ELWIN , ESQ . , of Horstead House near Norwich , ' and furthermore pronounces him the most able of any of its critics . ' As the metrical division of the lines of the First Folio is restored ' in this Edition , I have not cited Elwin in ...
... ELWIN , ESQ . , of Horstead House near Norwich , ' and furthermore pronounces him the most able of any of its critics . ' As the metrical division of the lines of the First Folio is restored ' in this Edition , I have not cited Elwin in ...
Page xv
... ELWIN : Shakespeare Restored 1853 1853 DYCE : A Few Notes on Shakespeare 1853 HUNTER : A Few Words in Reply , & c . 1853 W. SIDNEY WALKER : Shakespeare's Versification 1854 GRANT WHITE : Shakespeare's Scholar 1854 -HALLAM : Introduction ...
... ELWIN : Shakespeare Restored 1853 1853 DYCE : A Few Notes on Shakespeare 1853 HUNTER : A Few Words in Reply , & c . 1853 W. SIDNEY WALKER : Shakespeare's Versification 1854 GRANT WHITE : Shakespeare's Scholar 1854 -HALLAM : Introduction ...
Page 7
... ELWIN . This brief dialogue of the witches is a series of congratulatory ejaculations , and , brought to the height of ecstasy , they exultingly proclaim them- selves such as take good for evil and evil for good ; for the phrase ' Fair ...
... ELWIN . This brief dialogue of the witches is a series of congratulatory ejaculations , and , brought to the height of ecstasy , they exultingly proclaim them- selves such as take good for evil and evil for good ; for the phrase ' Fair ...
Page 11
... ELWIN , Fortune smiled , not upon Macdonwald's quarry , which would necessarily denote his foe , but upon his quarrel only ; and the deceitful smile that she thus bestowed upon an illegal cause calls forth the aptly opprobrious epithet ...
... ELWIN , Fortune smiled , not upon Macdonwald's quarry , which would necessarily denote his foe , but upon his quarrel only ; and the deceitful smile that she thus bestowed upon an illegal cause calls forth the aptly opprobrious epithet ...
Page 12
... ELWIN ( p . iii ) . The abrupt curtness of a verse brings the recital to a sudden check , where the progress of the combatant is temporarily arrested by the opposition of a potent foe ; graphically imaging this phase of the action ...
... ELWIN ( p . iii ) . The abrupt curtness of a verse brings the recital to a sudden check , where the progress of the combatant is temporarily arrested by the opposition of a potent foe ; graphically imaging this phase of the action ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABBOTT ambition appears BAILEY ii Banq Banquo blood called castle Cawdor character CLARENDON Coll COLLIER Compare conj Cotgrave crime crown dagger death deed DELIUS doubt drama Duncan Dunsinane Dyce Edition ELWIN English Enter Macbeth evil Exeunt Exit expression eyes fear feeling Fleance Ghost give hand HARRY ROWE hath haue heart HEATH heaven Hecate Holinshed honour horror Huds human HUNTER husband Johns JOHNSON king Ktly Lady Macbeth Lady Macduff LETTSOM lord Macb Macd Macduff Mach Malcolm MALONE means mind murder nature night noble passage perhaps play poet Pope present Ross scene Scotland seems sense Shakespeare Sing Siward sleep speak spirits STAUNTON Steev STEEVENS thane Thane of Cawdor thee Theob thou thought tion tragedy verb vnto WALKER Crit Warb weird sisters White wife witches word
Popular passages
Page 398 - Mackbeth 1 that had ysurped the crowne of Scotland, and, that doone, placed Malcolme surnamed Camoir, the sonne of Duncane, sometime king of Scotland, in the gouernement of that realme, who afterward slue the said Mackbeth, and then reigned in quiet . . . It is recorded also, that, in the foresaid battell...