King Lear: A TragedySamuel French, 1883 - 98 oldal |
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. oldal
... STAGE . THI THIS terribly sublime tragedy has suffered much from stage adaptations . Probably in Shakespeare's own days the play was altered and considerably abridged , for we find that in the first folio , while some lines are inserted ...
... STAGE . THI THIS terribly sublime tragedy has suffered much from stage adaptations . Probably in Shakespeare's own days the play was altered and considerably abridged , for we find that in the first folio , while some lines are inserted ...
. oldal
... stage with his eyes bandaged . This seems to be a great improvement . Scenes IV . and VI . naturally fall together , and conclude the third Act . There seems to the Editor no occasion for the six or eight transpositions of the dialogue ...
... stage with his eyes bandaged . This seems to be a great improvement . Scenes IV . and VI . naturally fall together , and conclude the third Act . There seems to the Editor no occasion for the six or eight transpositions of the dialogue ...
25. oldal
... ? Lear . No. Fool . Nor I neither ; but I can tell why a snail has a house . Lear . Why ? * Omitted on the stage , but a part of the dialogue is introduced in Act II . , Scene IV . Fool . Why , to put his head in ; SCENE IV . 25 KING LEAR .
... ? Lear . No. Fool . Nor I neither ; but I can tell why a snail has a house . Lear . Why ? * Omitted on the stage , but a part of the dialogue is introduced in Act II . , Scene IV . Fool . Why , to put his head in ; SCENE IV . 25 KING LEAR .
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Alack Albany arms art thou bastard blood brother Burgundy canst Cordelia Corn daughter dear death Doct Dost thou doth Dover Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl Earl of Gloucester Edmund Enter EDGAR Enter GLOUCESTER Enter KENT Enter LEAR Exeunt Exit Edgar eyes farewell father fear Flibbertigibbet follow Fool fortune foul fiend France gainst Gent Gentleman Give Glou Gloucester's gods Goneril grace hand hath hear heart heavens hither honour horse hovel inform'd KING LEAR knave lady letter look lord madam man's master Methinks nature never night noble nuncle o'er OSWALD pity poison'd poor Poor Tom pray Prithee Re-enter Regan SCENE seek Servants shame sirrah sister slave speak stand storm sword tears tell thee there's thine thing thou art thou dost thou hast thou shalt traitor trumpet villain What's