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Página x
... places the colour of the style combine to set the seal of Shakespeare on the play before us , and furnish us with internal and irresistible proofs that a considerable portion of this piece , as it now appears , was written by him .
... places the colour of the style combine to set the seal of Shakespeare on the play before us , and furnish us with internal and irresistible proofs that a considerable portion of this piece , as it now appears , was written by him .
Página xvii
Moreover , while it comes naturally in a dialogue between fishermen , it appears rather to have been lugged in by the ears in Law Tricks . of aiso Chapman's | ' hound te mis ' in INTRODUCTION xvii.
Moreover , while it comes naturally in a dialogue between fishermen , it appears rather to have been lugged in by the ears in Law Tricks . of aiso Chapman's | ' hound te mis ' in INTRODUCTION xvii.
Página 6
... their leader , should be over- looked ? " Quotations from the Ar- cadia , which will be found in the notes , support this conjecture . 1. Prince ] " It does not appear in the present drama that the father of Pericles is living .
... their leader , should be over- looked ? " Quotations from the Ar- cadia , which will be found in the notes , support this conjecture . 1. Prince ] " It does not appear in the present drama that the father of Pericles is living .
Página 33
The same confusion of " arms and " veins " appears to occur in Shirley's Love Tricks , iv . v . , where the much- wounded soldier implores compassion on a forlorn gentleman , that have lost the use of my veins " .
The same confusion of " arms and " veins " appears to occur in Shirley's Love Tricks , iv . v . , where the much- wounded soldier implores compassion on a forlorn gentleman , that have lost the use of my veins " .
Página 46
He lov'd me dearly , And for his sake I wish the having of it ; And that you'd guide me to your sovereign's court , Where with it I may appear a gentleman ; And if that ever my low fortune's better , 145 I'll pay your bounties ...
He lov'd me dearly , And for his sake I wish the having of it ; And that you'd guide me to your sovereign's court , Where with it I may appear a gentleman ; And if that ever my low fortune's better , 145 I'll pay your bounties ...
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action Acts Antiochus appears arms Arranged Bawd better Boult bring brought Cleon comes Compare conjecture course daughter dead death Divided doth doubt Dyce edition Editors ending Enter Exeunt eyes faith father fear Fish fortune frequent give gods gold Gower hand hast hath hear heaven honour keep kind king Knight lady leave line in Qq live look lord Lysimachus Malone Marina master mean mind nature never novel original pare passage perhaps Pericles piece play poor present prince prose in Qq Quarto queen quotes rest Rowe SCENE Second seems sense Shakespeare shore speak Steevens story Tale tell Thai Thaisa thee thing Third thou thought Tyre unto Wilkins's wind Winter's wish worth