Select Plays; A Midsummer Night's DreamClarendon Press, 1879 - 147 pages |
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Page 83
... Hamlet , iii . 2. 167 : ' And thirty dozen moons with borrow'd sheen . ' C Johnson takes it as an adjective , and renders it shining , bright , gay ' ; but Milton , with the passage in his mind , uses it as a substantive . See Comus ...
... Hamlet , iii . 2. 167 : ' And thirty dozen moons with borrow'd sheen . ' C Johnson takes it as an adjective , and renders it shining , bright , gay ' ; but Milton , with the passage in his mind , uses it as a substantive . See Comus ...
Page 90
... Hamlet , iv . 4. 64 : 95. a beard . * Which is not tomb enough and continent To hide the slain . ' Malone quotes Sonnet xii . 8 : ' And summer's green all girded up in sheaves Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard . ' 97 ...
... Hamlet , iv . 4. 64 : 95. a beard . * Which is not tomb enough and continent To hide the slain . ' Malone quotes Sonnet xii . 8 : ' And summer's green all girded up in sheaves Borne on the bier with white and bristly beard . ' 97 ...
Page 91
... Hamlet , i . 1. 119 : 6 The moist star Upon whose influence Neptune's empire stands . ' 104. Pale in her anger . For a similar fancy , compare Romeo and Juliet , ii . 2. 4 : C Arise fair sun , and kill the envious moon SC . I. ] 91 A ...
... Hamlet , i . 1. 119 : 6 The moist star Upon whose influence Neptune's empire stands . ' 104. Pale in her anger . For a similar fancy , compare Romeo and Juliet , ii . 2. 4 : C Arise fair sun , and kill the envious moon SC . I. ] 91 A ...
Page 92
... Hamlet , iii . 2. 312 : ' Guil . The king , sir , - Ham . Ay , sir , what of him ? Guil . Is in his retirement marvellous distempered . Ham . With drink , sir ? Guil . No , my lord , rather with choler . ' < 109. Hiems ' . So Love's ...
... Hamlet , iii . 2. 312 : ' Guil . The king , sir , - Ham . Ay , sir , what of him ? Guil . Is in his retirement marvellous distempered . Ham . With drink , sir ? Guil . No , my lord , rather with choler . ' < 109. Hiems ' . So Love's ...
Page 94
... Hamlet , ii . 2. 521 : ' It shall to the barber's , with your beard . ' Abbott , § 405 . C 147. injury has here something of the meaning of insult and not of wrong only . Compare iii . 2. 148 , and the adjective injurious ' in the sense ...
... Hamlet , ii . 2. 521 : ' It shall to the barber's , with your beard . ' Abbott , § 405 . C 147. injury has here something of the meaning of insult and not of wrong only . Compare iii . 2. 148 , and the adjective injurious ' in the sense ...
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