The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators: Comprehending a Life of the Poet, and an Enlarged History of the Stage, Volume 12 |
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Page 170
Whom every thing becomes “ , to chide , to laugh , To weep ' ; whose every
passion fully strives ? To make itself , in thee , fair and admir'd ! No messenger ;
but thine and all alone ?, love of Love , " means , for the sake of the queen of love
.
Whom every thing becomes “ , to chide , to laugh , To weep ' ; whose every
passion fully strives ? To make itself , in thee , fair and admir'd ! No messenger ;
but thine and all alone ?, love of Love , " means , for the sake of the queen of love
.
Page 214
Whiles we are suitors to their throne , decays The thing we sue for 4 . MENE . We
, ignorant of ourselves , Beg often our own harms , which the wise powers Deny
us for our good ; so find we profit , By losing of our prayers . Ром . I shall do well ...
Whiles we are suitors to their throne , decays The thing we sue for 4 . MENE . We
, ignorant of ourselves , Beg often our own harms , which the wise powers Deny
us for our good ; so find we profit , By losing of our prayers . Ром . I shall do well ...
Page 391
To shake any thing out , is a phrase in common use among our ancient writers .
So Holinshed , p . 743 : “ God's providence shaking men out of their shifts of
supposed safetie , " & c . Perhaps , however , Shakspeare might mean nothing
more ...
To shake any thing out , is a phrase in common use among our ancient writers .
So Holinshed , p . 743 : “ God's providence shaking men out of their shifts of
supposed safetie , " & c . Perhaps , however , Shakspeare might mean nothing
more ...
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The Plays And Poems Of William Shakspeare William Shakespeare,Alexander Pope,Samuel Johnson No preview available - 2019 |
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