The Works of Shakespeare ..., Volume 14 |
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Pagina x
... where the Spenserian " thrice- happy " ( Peele's ) is omitted from the final play . The two great speeches of Margaret and York are very slightly altered , both undoubtedly Shakespeare's . Margaret recalls again The First Contention ...
... where the Spenserian " thrice- happy " ( Peele's ) is omitted from the final play . The two great speeches of Margaret and York are very slightly altered , both undoubtedly Shakespeare's . Margaret recalls again The First Contention ...
Pagina xi
For " Piteous spectacle , " a phrase of Spenser's , which occurs in the Messenger's speech ( Q , II . i . 43 ) , “ saddest spectacle " appears in the final play ( II . v . 73 ) . Line 71 ( “ The flower of Europe " ) is found in The ...
For " Piteous spectacle , " a phrase of Spenser's , which occurs in the Messenger's speech ( Q , II . i . 43 ) , “ saddest spectacle " appears in the final play ( II . v . 73 ) . Line 71 ( “ The flower of Europe " ) is found in The ...
Pagina xiii
We have Spenser's piteous spectacle " here ( 73 ) altered to " saddest spectacle before ( II . i . 67 ) . Some of the changes are very quaint , as " son so rude , " to " son so rued " ( 109 ) . Several lines of Q are shifted about ...
We have Spenser's piteous spectacle " here ( 73 ) altered to " saddest spectacle before ( II . i . 67 ) . Some of the changes are very quaint , as " son so rude , " to " son so rued " ( 109 ) . Several lines of Q are shifted about ...
Pagina xviii
12-14 ) , from Spenser's old dragon . The tag at the end in the style of Seneca is transposed from lower down ( at 45 ) , in Q. The " bug that feared us all " ( 2 ) is also Spenserian and not in Q. The fine metaphor of the cedar and the ...
12-14 ) , from Spenser's old dragon . The tag at the end in the style of Seneca is transposed from lower down ( at 45 ) , in Q. The " bug that feared us all " ( 2 ) is also Spenserian and not in Q. The fine metaphor of the cedar and the ...
Pagina xxvi
SPENSER . Parallels from Spenser are not very striking - not enough to rank as loans - but sufficient to show how Shakespeare was imbued with his writings . Reference will be necessary only to the passages where information is to be ...
SPENSER . Parallels from Spenser are not very striking - not enough to rank as loans - but sufficient to show how Shakespeare was imbued with his writings . Reference will be necessary only to the passages where information is to be ...
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