A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare V1: Romeo and Juliet (1871)

William Shakespeare

A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare V1: Romeo and Juliet (1871)
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Kessinger Publishing
Country
United States
Published
24 September 2009
Pages
506
ISBN
9781120258946

A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare V1: Romeo and Juliet (1871)

William Shakespeare

Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: As you Like it. ASlus primus. Scoena Prima. Enter Orlando and Adam. Orlando. S I remember Adam, it was vpon this fafhion bequeathed me by will, but poore a thoufand Crownes, and as thou faift, charged my bro- ther on his bleffing to breed mee well : and Scoena] Scena F3F4. Dyce i, Sta. fashion,?he Dyce iii, An orchard. Rowe. Oliver’s House. Minis. Pope. Oliver’s Orchard. Theob. Or- 4. me by] me. By Johns, me: By chard of Oliver’s House. Cap. Steev. 3. fa/kion] my father Warb. Han. poore a] a poore F,. a poor F3F4, Cap. fashion. He Mai. Var. Coll. ii, Rowe + , Cap. Var. Steev. Coll. Sing. Ktly. fashion;? Wh. fashion,? Hal. 5. Crownes] Crowns F3F4. As you Like it] Tieck, in Schlegel’s translation (vol. iv, p. 308) suggests that the title of this play, which may have been, he thinks, originally different, was adopted by Shakespeare as a playful answer either to Ben Jonson’s boastfulness in the Epilogue to Cynthia!i Revels, or else to his contempt for his audience expressed in the Induction to Every Man Out of his Humour. In the former, the Epilogue himself, at a loss to know how to characterise the play, bursts forth in the last line with,‘ By 'tis good, and if yon like ’t you may;’ and in the latter, Asper, the poet, before he leaves the stage to take his part as an actor in the performance, says: ‘ Now I go To turn an actor, and a humorist, Where, ere I do resume my present person, We hope to make the circles of your eyes Flow with distilled laughter: if we fail, We must impute it to this only chance, Art hath an enemy call’d ignorance.’ Whereto, according to Tieck, Shakespeare gives answer in the title to this play: ‘As you like it, or, just as yon please, it is a Comedy. Not in itself, but just as you, the spectators, choose to pronounc…

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