Commentaries on the Historical Plays of Shakspeare, 第 2 巻H. Colburn, 1840 |
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... , I own that it is , in my opinion , inferior to some others , from the absence of the splendid and stately speeches , which I have noticed in former plays . CORIOLANUS . As it is certain that Shakspeare did not MACBETH . 209.
... , I own that it is , in my opinion , inferior to some others , from the absence of the splendid and stately speeches , which I have noticed in former plays . CORIOLANUS . As it is certain that Shakspeare did not MACBETH . 209.
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... Coriolanus from Eu- tropius , or Goldsmith , if not from Plutarch , before we go to see a play . I shall not attempt to subject the three Latin plays - Coriolanus , Julius Cæsar , and Antony and Cleopatra - to the sort of commentary ...
... Coriolanus from Eu- tropius , or Goldsmith , if not from Plutarch , before we go to see a play . I shall not attempt to subject the three Latin plays - Coriolanus , Julius Cæsar , and Antony and Cleopatra - to the sort of commentary ...
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... Coriolanus is taken from Sir Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Lives ; but it commences with a slight variation . Ac- cording to the Greek biographer , and to other received histories , the plebeians of Rome , about the year 260 ...
... Coriolanus is taken from Sir Thomas North's translation of Plutarch's Lives ; but it commences with a slight variation . Ac- cording to the Greek biographer , and to other received histories , the plebeians of Rome , about the year 260 ...
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... cholerick and impatient , that he would yield to no living creature : which made him churlish , uncivil , * See Keightley's Hist . of Rome , p . 65 . and altogether unfit for any man's conversation . Yet men CORIOLANUS . 213.
... cholerick and impatient , that he would yield to no living creature : which made him churlish , uncivil , * See Keightley's Hist . of Rome , p . 65 . and altogether unfit for any man's conversation . Yet men CORIOLANUS . 213.
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... Coriolanus , a remark which Plutarch makes as from himself . 66 For he was even such another as Cato would have a soldier and a captain to be , not only terrible and fierce to lay about him , but to make the enemy afraid with the sound ...
... Coriolanus , a remark which Plutarch makes as from himself . 66 For he was even such another as Cato would have a soldier and a captain to be , not only terrible and fierce to lay about him , but to make the enemy afraid with the sound ...
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afterwards Alban's Anne Boleyn Antony appears Archbishop ascribed authority Banquo battle battle of Wakefield Bishop Bosw brother Brutus Buck Buckingham cardinal Cassius Catherine cause character Chronicle Clarence Coleridge Cont Coriolanus Cromwell crown Croyl Croyland daughter death Dion Cassius doubt dramatic dramatist Duke of Gloucester Earl Elizabeth English Fabyan father favour fear France friends Glou grace Hall hath heart Henry VI Henry VIII Henry's Holinshed honour imputation Jameson Johnson Julius Cæsar King Edward King Henry king's Lady Lancastrian Lingard Macb Macbeth Macduff Margaret marriage married mentioned mind murder Neville noble passage persons play plebeians Plutarch poet Polydore Vergil Prince Edward queen reign remark Richard Richard III Richmond Roman Rome says scene Scotland Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sir Thomas Siward slain speak speare speech Stanley story Surry tells Thane thou throne tion Tower truth unto Warwick wife Wolsey Wolsey's Wyntown Wyrc York Yorkists