A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: Macbeth. 1873 |
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Page 16
The Elizabethans frequently used so before as . CLARENDON . Compare Cym . I , iv , 3 . 45. Enter Ross ] STEEVENS . As Ross alone is addressed , or is mentioned , in and as . Len . What haste looks through his eyes !
The Elizabethans frequently used so before as . CLARENDON . Compare Cym . I , iv , 3 . 45. Enter Ross ] STEEVENS . As Ross alone is addressed , or is mentioned , in and as . Len . What haste looks through his eyes !
Page 17
What haste looks through his eyes ! So should he look That seems to speak things strange . Ross . God save the king ! 47 Dun . Whence camest thou , worthy thane ? Ross . From Fife , great king ; Where the Norweyan banners flout the sky ...
What haste looks through his eyes ! So should he look That seems to speak things strange . Ross . God save the king ! 47 Dun . Whence camest thou , worthy thane ? Ross . From Fife , great king ; Where the Norweyan banners flout the sky ...
Page 28
Look what I have . Sec . Witch . Show me , show me . First Witch . Here I have a pilot's thumb , Wreck'd as homeward he did come . Third Witch . A drum , a drum ! Macbeth doth come . All . The weird sisters , hand in hand , [ Drum ...
Look what I have . Sec . Witch . Show me , show me . First Witch . Here I have a pilot's thumb , Wreck'd as homeward he did come . Third Witch . A drum , a drum ! Macbeth doth come . All . The weird sisters , hand in hand , [ Drum ...
Page 29
Heywood , in his The Late Witches of Lancashire , has , ' You look like one of the Scottish wayward sisters . ' White . This word should be pronounced wayrd ( ei as in obeisance , ' « freight , ' * weight , ' either , ' neither ' ) and ...
Heywood , in his The Late Witches of Lancashire , has , ' You look like one of the Scottish wayward sisters . ' White . This word should be pronounced wayrd ( ei as in obeisance , ' « freight , ' * weight , ' either , ' neither ' ) and ...
Page 30
What are these So wither'd , and so wild in their attire , 40 That look not like the inhabitants o ' the earth , And yet are on't ? —Live you ? or are you aught That man may question ? You seem to understand me , By each at once her ...
What are these So wither'd , and so wild in their attire , 40 That look not like the inhabitants o ' the earth , And yet are on't ? —Live you ? or are you aught That man may question ? You seem to understand me , By each at once her ...
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Common terms and phrases
ABBOTT appears Banquo believe blood called cause character CLARENDON Coll COLLIER comes common Compare death deed Delius doubt Duncan Dyce effect Elwin English Enter expression eyes fear feeling Ghost give given hand hath head heart Holinshed Huds human instance Johns JOHNSON kind king Ktly Lady Lady Macbeth less lives look lord Macb Macbeth Macd Macduff Malcolm MALONE means mind murder nature never night once original passage perhaps person play Pope present probably reason reference Ross Rowe scene Scotland seems sense Shakespeare Sing sleep speak spirits stage stand Steev STEEVENS supposed thane thee Theob things thou thought true WALKER Warb White whole wife Witch word
Popular passages
Page 400 - 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...