Page:Notes and Queries - Series 9 - General Index.djvu/251

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NINTH SERIES.


243


Shakspeare Criticisms :

Cymbeline, Act I. sc. 3, "For so long as he could mark me," &c., ix. 223; "With his eye, or ear," ii. 524

Act rV. sc. 2, "To them the legions," i. 83 Hamlet, changes in its representation, i. 83 ; by Dan Hayes, iii. 87; Macready's copy, iv. 209 ; ' Hamlet ' ameliorated, vi. 369 ; a ficti- tious scene in, vii. 343

Act I. sc. 1, "The bird of dawning," i. 83, 283, 423 ; "A storm [As stars] with rains [trains] of fire," viii. 237, 480 ; ix. 342 ; x. 224 ; "When beggars die there are no comets seen,"xi. 163 ; " Miching mallicho," xi. 504 Act I. sc. 3, " With almost all the holy vows of

heaven," xii. 423 Act I. sc. 4, " The dram of eale," ii. 204 ; iv.

222 ; v. 162 ; xii. 323, 423 Act I. sc. 5, " Unhousel'd, disappointed, un-

aneled," iv. 303, 453 Act III. sc. 4, " Hoist with bis own petard,"

i. 287, 331

Act IV. sc. 3, " Diseases desperate grown," v. 63

Henry IV., Part II., Act II. sc. 4, "mallet" or

"mullet," ix. 486 ; x. 93, 173, 193, 293, 374

Act V. sc. 2, "You are right, Justice," iii. 282

Act V. sc. 3, " Proface," iv. 82

Henry V., Act V. sc. 2, " So happy be the issue,

brother Ireland," vii. 22 Henry VI., Part I., Act I. sc. 1, "Than Julius

Caesar or bright," i. 284 ; ii. 204 Henry VI., second and third parts of, viii. 238 Henry VIII., Act II. sc. 3, allusion in, vii. 69 Julius Caesar, its date, iii. 105, 216

Act II. sc. 1, " Bears with glasses," v. 393 ;

vi. 203 Act V. sc. 1, "Their bloody sign of battle is

hung out," v. 164 King John, Archduke of Austria in, ii. 38

story of Philip the Bastard, v. 393

Act II. sc. 1, " Excuse ; it is to beat usurping

down," v. 164 ; " The bias of the world," vii.

345

King Lear, Act II. sc. 2 and 4, " O, how this mother swells up toward my heart ! " xi. 162 323 ; xii. 324 Act III. sc. 7, "All cruels else subscribed," vi

204, 363 Act IV. sc. 2, " Ere they have done their

mischief," vi. 204 Act IV. sc. 3, "And clamour moisten 'd," vi

204 Act IV. sc. 6, " Through tatter'd clothes smal

vices do appear," vi. 205, 369 Love's Labour's Lost, perfect copy, ii. 85 Lover's Complaint, 11. 271-3, iii. 125, 271, 337 Macbeth, spurious passages in, ii. 321

Act I. sc. 2, "Damned quarry," iii. 223; iv 222; v. 62; "Which ne'er shook hands, ix. 343

Act I. sc. 3, " Aroint thee, witch ! " vi. 5 Act I. sc. 4, " In drops of sorrow, Sons, kins

men, thanes," ix. 343

Act I. sc. 5, "And that which rather thou, ix. 343


hakspeare Criticisms :

Macbeth, Act I. sc. 7, " If the assassination,"

&c., x. 224

Act II. sc. 1, 11. 56-60, x. 224 Act IV. sc. 1, " Trebble scepters," xi. 325 Act V. sc. 1, "Mated mind," xii. 324 Measure for Measure, Act IV. sc. 3, "At the

consecrated Fount," ix. 343 Merchant of Venice, "should" and "would" in, xi. 25 ; origin of "pound of flesh," 266, 476 Act I. sc. 1, "But even now worth this," v. 63,

163 ; " Pure innocence," 63 Act I. sc. 2, " It is no mean happiness," v. 163 ;

" Married to a sponge," xi. 25, 266 Act II. sc. 9, "To offend, and judge, are

distinct offices," v. 163 ; vi. 5 Act III. sc. 2, " Tell me where is Fancy bred," vi. 5 ; " And so, though yours, not yours," viii. 237 Act IV. sc. 1, " Quit the fine," v. 393 ; "Then

must the Jew be merciful," viii. 481 Act V. sc. 1, German translation, x. 224, 283 ;

"Out-night," xi. 25

Merry Wives of Windsor, Quarto and Folio editions, ii. 523 ; iii. 64 ; original of Sir Hugh Evans, iii. 381, 474 Much Ado about Nothing. Act I. sc. 1, "A

recheat winded," vi. 211 Act II. sc. 1, " If her breath were as terrible,"

vii. 108

Act V. sc. 3, " Heavenly, heavenly," viii. 13 Othello, its dramatis persona, n. 246, 335

Act I. sc. 1, "Damn'd in a fair wife," i. 82, 283, 422, 483 ; ii. 203, 402, 524 ; iii. 64, 222, 282, 368, 422 ; its opening lines, vi. 204 Act I. sc. 2, "That the magnifico is much

beloved," ii. 402 ; iii. 64

Act I. sc. 3, " Vouch with me, Heaven," i. 82 Act IT. sc. 1, " Moor in the ranke garb," i. 83 ; " Essential vesture of creation," ii. 403 ; vi. 364 ; viii. 12, 161

Act II. sc. 3, " Dog to affright an imperious lion," ii. 403 ; "I will ask him for my place again," ib. Act IV. sc. 2, " 'Tis meet I should be us'd so,'

i. 83 Act V. sc. 2, "It is the cause," i. 283, 422

iii. 364, 422 ; iv. 141

Phoenix and the Turtle, i. 228 t

Kape of Lucrece, classical learning absent, xii. 323 Romeo and Juliet, Act I. sc. 1, " 'Tis the way

to cal hers (exquisit)," vii. 344 Act II. sc. 2, " At lovers' perjuries," &c., iv.

221; viii. 480 Act II. sc. 3, "The grey-eyed morn smiles on

the frowning night," vi. 5 Act III. sc. 6, "Runaways eyes," xi. 162 Sonnet LVIL. xi. 448 Sonnet LXXVL, x. 125, 274, 412, 495, 517 ;

xi. 96, 249, 493 ; xii. 35 Sonnet CXLVL, iv. 142

Sonnets: "Mr. W. H.," ii. 344, 372; xi. 125; edition of 1609, vi. 348, 435 ; their delinea- tion of Shakespeare, x. 343 ; new theory on, xii. 141, 210, 273

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