Page:Cymbeline (1924) Yale.djvu/167

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The Tragedy of Cymbeline
155

III. i. 20 oaks Ff: rocks

III. ii. 42, 43 would even Ff: would not even

III. iv. 104 mine eyeballs Ff: mine eyeballs blind

III. iv. 135 nothing: F1 nothing; F2 nothing? Ff3, 4 nothing Cloten

III. iv. 177 will Ff: you'll

III. v. 9 your Grace, and you Ff: your Grace. Qu. And you!

III. v. 44 the loudest of (th' lowd of Ff): the loudest

III. v. 95 once, Ff: once

III. vi. 73 After long absence Ff: After a long absence

IV. i. 21 happily Ff: haply

IV. ii. 112 cause of fear Ff: cease of fear

IV. ii. 170 thou thyself F1 (thyself Ff2, 3, 4): how thyself

IV. ii. 207 but ay: but I Ff

IV. ii. 237 to our mother Ff: our mother

V. i. 20 mistress; peace Ff: mistress-piece

V. iii. 92 leg Ff: lag

V. iv. 60 Leonati Ff: Leonati's

V. v. 393 interrogatories Ff: inter-gatories

APPENDIX D

Suggestions for Collateral Reading

I. Editions.

E. Dowden: The Arden Shakespeare, 1903 (3d ed., 1918).

H. H. Furness: The Variorum Shakespeare, 1913.

II. General Criticism.

W. Hazlitt: Characters of Shakespeare's Plays, 1817. Everyman's Library edition, pp. 1–11.

Lady Martin: On Some of Shakespeare's Female Characters, 1885.

Barrett Wendell: William Shakespeare, a Study in Elizabethan Literature, 1894, pp. 355–364.