The Tragedie of Julius Caesar |
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Page v
... PLAYS AND EDITIONS PAGE vii · xvii xxvii I 97 99 102 · 105 · 107 108 A GLOSSARY OF WORDS : GRAMMATICAL USAGE AND PRONUNCIATION A LIST OF VARIORUM READINGS SELECTED CRITICISM · 167 · 169 183 195 CH EDITORS ' PREFACE HAUCER and Spenser ...
... PLAYS AND EDITIONS PAGE vii · xvii xxvii I 97 99 102 · 105 · 107 108 A GLOSSARY OF WORDS : GRAMMATICAL USAGE AND PRONUNCIATION A LIST OF VARIORUM READINGS SELECTED CRITICISM · 167 · 169 183 195 CH EDITORS ' PREFACE HAUCER and Spenser ...
Page vii
... Plays . Yet Chaucer is , of course , far more archaic , and Spenser is , though so little earlier , much more affected and remote in style , than Shakespeare . Without as much need for it , Shakespeare has been modernized to suit each ...
... Plays . Yet Chaucer is , of course , far more archaic , and Spenser is , though so little earlier , much more affected and remote in style , than Shakespeare . Without as much need for it , Shakespeare has been modernized to suit each ...
Page viii
... Plays does not mean that the Quarto issue was more authoritative than the Folio issue of the same Plays , for the reason that all such Quarto issues were surreptitious . They may or may not have been derived from copies of Shakespeare's ...
... Plays does not mean that the Quarto issue was more authoritative than the Folio issue of the same Plays , for the reason that all such Quarto issues were surreptitious . They may or may not have been derived from copies of Shakespeare's ...
Page ix
... Plays on the stage when they were new , and which was naturally loath to make them public in any other way , until the chiefs of that Company , Hemminge and Condell , act-- ing as Shakespeare's friends and fellows , ' chose to col- lect ...
... Plays on the stage when they were new , and which was naturally loath to make them public in any other way , until the chiefs of that Company , Hemminge and Condell , act-- ing as Shakespeare's friends and fellows , ' chose to col- lect ...
Page x
... the needlessness of any emendation whatever . 6 6 Capell first , then Jennens for the five Plays he edited , then Malone , emended more cautiously and recurred more assiduously than any of their predeces- sors to X EDITORS ' PREFACE.
... the needlessness of any emendation whatever . 6 6 Capell first , then Jennens for the five Plays he edited , then Malone , emended more cautiously and recurred more assiduously than any of their predeces- sors to X EDITORS ' PREFACE.
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Common terms and phrases
2DYCE ANON Antony's Artemidorus beare blood Brut Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cęsarism Caius Calphurnia Capitoll Casar Cask Caska Cassius Cato cause Cicero Cinna Clitus COLL conspirators CRAIK Crowne death Decius doth Elizabethan enemies Enter Exeunt Exit feare fire flye Folio follow friends generall ghost Gods hand hath heare heart heere Honor Ides of March Julius Cęsar King Lepidus Ligarius looke Lord Lucillius Lucius Lupercal Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messa Messala Metellus misprint night Noble Brutus North North's Brutus Octa Octavius oration Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Pompey Pompey's POPE Portia Publius Quarto Roman Rome Rowe says Scene selfe Senate SEYMOUR Shake Shakespeare shew Soothsayer speake speech spirit stand STEEV Strato sword tell thee THEOB thing thinke thou art Titinius Trebonius unto Volumnius WARB Wee'l word wrong