The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumen10J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Página 31
... STEEVENS . —in a sieve I'll thither sail , ] Reginald Scott , in his Dis- covery of Witchcraft , 1584 , says it was believed that witches " could sail in an egg shell , a cockle or muscle shell , through and under the tempestuous seas ...
... STEEVENS . —in a sieve I'll thither sail , ] Reginald Scott , in his Dis- covery of Witchcraft , 1584 , says it was believed that witches " could sail in an egg shell , a cockle or muscle shell , through and under the tempestuous seas ...
Página 35
... STEEVENS . • Though his bark cannot be lost , Yet it shall be tempest - toss'd . ] So , in Newes from Scotland , & c . a pamphlet already quoted : " Againe it is confessed , that the said christened cat was the cause of the Kinges ...
... STEEVENS . • Though his bark cannot be lost , Yet it shall be tempest - toss'd . ] So , in Newes from Scotland , & c . a pamphlet already quoted : " Againe it is confessed , that the said christened cat was the cause of the Kinges ...
Página 40
... STEEVENS . thane of Cawdor ! ] Dr. Johnson observes , in his Jour- ney to the Western Islands of Scotland , that part of Calder Castle , from which Macbeth drew his second title , is still re- maining . In one of his Letters , Vol . I ...
... STEEVENS . thane of Cawdor ! ] Dr. Johnson observes , in his Jour- ney to the Western Islands of Scotland , that part of Calder Castle , from which Macbeth drew his second title , is still re- maining . In one of his Letters , Vol . I ...
Página 48
... Steevens remains in its full force ; for since he knew that " by Sinel's death he was thane of Glamis , " how can this salutation be considered as prophetic ? Or why should he afterwards say , with admiration , " GLAMIS , and thane of ...
... Steevens remains in its full force ; for since he knew that " by Sinel's death he was thane of Glamis , " how can this salutation be considered as prophetic ? Or why should he afterwards say , with admiration , " GLAMIS , and thane of ...
Página 51
... STEEVENS . The same expression is used by a writer nearly contemporary with Shakspeare : " Neither can there be any thing in the world more acceptable to me than death , whose hower and time if they were as certayne , " & c . Fenton's ...
... STEEVENS . The same expression is used by a writer nearly contemporary with Shakspeare : " Neither can there be any thing in the world more acceptable to me than death , whose hower and time if they were as certayne , " & c . Fenton's ...
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Términos y frases comunes
All's ancient Arthur Banquo BAST Bastard Ben Jonson blood breath called castle Cawdor CONST Coriolanus crown Cymbeline death deed doth Duncan edit emendation England Enter Exeunt expression eyes father Faulconbridge fear folio following passage France give hand hast hath heart heaven Hecate Henry VI Holinshed honour Hubert Iliad JOHNSON Julius Cæsar King Henry King Henry IV King John King Richard Kyng Lady Macbeth lord MACB MACD Macduff Malcolm MALONE MASON means murder nature night noble observed old copy old play old reading peace perhaps Philip poet Pope present prince Queen Rape of Lucrece ROSSE sayd says scene Scotland seems sense Shakspeare Shakspeare's signifies sleep speak speech spirit STEEVENS suppose Tale thane thee Theobald There's thine things thou art thought tragedy unto WARBURTON weird sisters Winter's Tale WITCH word þat