The Shakespeare-Expositor: An Aid to the Perfect Understanding of Shakespeare's Plays

Cover The Shakespeare-Expositor: An Aid to the Perfect Understanding of Shakespeare's Plays
The Shakespeare-Expositor: An Aid to the Perfect Understanding of Shakespeare's Plays
Thomas Keightley
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* Cunning ' here is skill taken in a ffood sense, as in " May my right-hand forget her cunning " (Ps. cxxxvii).
" Like to a lonely dragon that his fen Makes feared." Perhaps the right reading would be den.
" Will or not exceed the common, or be caught." The negative seems required to make sense.
" My first son, Whither wilt thou go ? " \ She had, according to herself, no other son (see i. 3) ; and again she says of herself (v. 3), " While she, poor hen, fond of no second brood.'' I have never m
...et with * first ' in the sense of noblest, that given it here by the critics. I would therefore rosA fairest. In Tr. and Cr. we have ^^fair Lord ^neas " (i. 3) ; ''fair Prince " (iii. 1, v. 1) ; "/«tr Diomed " (iv. 1) J fair beholders (Prol.).
" More than a wild exposture to each chance." Southern read exposure, which probably the poet wrote.
Cor. " Oh, the gods ! " I give this speech to FeV., to whom it is better suited.
Her only other speech in this scene is "0 Heavens!
Heavens 1 " ^__ Sc. 3.


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