The Works of Shakespeare, 1±ÇMethuen, 1904 |
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xv ÆäÀÌÁö
... husbands , with an even more explicit account of the colour device . Here there is much repetition . A very few words would have sufficed to let audience or reader know , in the last Scene of this Act , that Fenton knew the plot , had ...
... husbands , with an even more explicit account of the colour device . Here there is much repetition . A very few words would have sufficed to let audience or reader know , in the last Scene of this Act , that Fenton knew the plot , had ...
xlvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... husband goes this morning a- birding " ( III . v . 45 ) ; and IV . ii . 8 , 59. See note at the first of these passages . This sport was carried on with hawks ( and sometimes dogs assisted ) and fowling - pieces , after legitimate ...
... husband goes this morning a- birding " ( III . v . 45 ) ; and IV . ii . 8 , 59. See note at the first of these passages . This sport was carried on with hawks ( and sometimes dogs assisted ) and fowling - pieces , after legitimate ...
liv ÆäÀÌÁö
... husband the scapegoat . He comes most near to that position . There is no possibility of such a result here , except that Ford loses his money . All along there is not a suggestion of affection , even of the grosser The wives have rich ...
... husband the scapegoat . He comes most near to that position . There is no possibility of such a result here , except that Ford loses his money . All along there is not a suggestion of affection , even of the grosser The wives have rich ...
lv ÆäÀÌÁö
... husband . We know nothing of her husband's reasons , we simply find him there awaiting his punishment at the hands of his wife through Falstaff's instrumentality . A jealous husband is almost a necessary property in a play of this time ...
... husband . We know nothing of her husband's reasons , we simply find him there awaiting his punishment at the hands of his wife through Falstaff's instrumentality . A jealous husband is almost a necessary property in a play of this time ...
lxxi ÆäÀÌÁö
... the other . Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Page , for the purposes of the plot , may be regarded as one character . They form the connecting bond between the two tales , by means of the husband of the one and the daughter INTRODUCTION lxxi.
... the other . Mrs. Ford and Mrs. Page , for the purposes of the plot , may be regarded as one character . They form the connecting bond between the two tales , by means of the husband of the one and the daughter INTRODUCTION lxxi.
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