Romeo and Juliet |
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Page lvi
... marriage as a necessary demand of this love , not as a merely subjective , but as an objective moral necessity— for marriage ought to be desired where there is genuine and sincere love ; on the other side we have the equally justified ...
... marriage as a necessary demand of this love , not as a merely subjective , but as an objective moral necessity— for marriage ought to be desired where there is genuine and sincere love ; on the other side we have the equally justified ...
Page 122
... married to the county ? This shall forbid it : knife , lie thou there . What if the friar should give me this drink To poison me , for fear I should disclose Our former marriage ? Ah ! I wrong him much ; He is a holy and religious man ...
... married to the county ? This shall forbid it : knife , lie thou there . What if the friar should give me this drink To poison me , for fear I should disclose Our former marriage ? Ah ! I wrong him much ; He is a holy and religious man ...
Page 153
... married them ; and their stol'n marriage - day Was Tybalt's dooms - day , whose untimely death Banish'd the new - made bridegroom from this city ; For whom , and not for Tybalt , Juliet pined . You , to remove that siege of grief from ...
... married them ; and their stol'n marriage - day Was Tybalt's dooms - day , whose untimely death Banish'd the new - made bridegroom from this city ; For whom , and not for Tybalt , Juliet pined . You , to remove that siege of grief from ...
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Common terms and phrases
Alack art thou Arthur Brooke Bandello banished beauty Benvolio Brooke's poem character conj daugh dead dear death dost doth Enter Romeo Exeunt Exit eyes fair Farewell father fear Friar Laurence gentle give gleek gone grave grief hand hate hath hear heart heaven hence holy ISRAEL GOLLANCZ kinsman kiss Lady Capulet light lips lives look lord love's lovers Madam maid Mantua marriage married Mercutio Montague nature night Nurse old copies Paris passion play Poet Pope from Q prince quarrel quarto of 1597 reading from Q Romeo and Juliet Rosaline SCENE Shakespeare slain sorrow soul speak speech stand stay sweet sword tears tell thee thine thing Thomas Creede thou art thou hast thou wilt tomb tragedy Tybalt Verona vex'd villain wife woeful word young