An art edition of Shakespeare, classified as comedies, tragedies, histories and sonnets, each part arranged in chronological order, including also a list of familiar quotations . more approbation than ever proofitself would earnd him. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 155. fiend like thee might bear my soul to hell. Act 3, Sc. 4, of my lean and low ability Ill lend you something. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 307. hate ingratitude more in a manThan lying, vainness, babbling, any taint of vice whose strong corrup-tionInhabits our frail blood. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 318. AjfTOIsIO.


An art edition of Shakespeare, classified as comedies, tragedies, histories and sonnets, each part arranged in chronological order, including also a list of familiar quotations . more approbation than ever proofitself would earnd him. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 155. fiend like thee might bear my soul to hell. Act 3, Sc. 4, of my lean and low ability Ill lend you something. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 307. hate ingratitude more in a manThan lying, vainness, babbling, any taint of vice whose strong corrup-tionInhabits our frail blood. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 318. AjfTOIsIO. In nature theres no blemish, but themind; None can be calld deformd, but the un-kind: Virtue is beauty, but the beauteous evil Are empty trunks oerflourished by the devil. Act 3, Sc. 4, I. 332. fancy still my sense in Lethe steep;If it be thus to dream still let me sleep. Act 4, Sc. 1, I. 63. is as fat and fulsome to mine earAs howling after music. Act 5, Sc. 1, I. 103. Malvolio. Made the most notorious geek and gullThat eer invention playd on. Act 5, Sc. 1, I. 328. the whirligig of time brings in his revenges. Act 5, Sc. 1, I. 360. 412. 413 Alls Well That Ends Well. BERTEAM, Count of Eossilion, had newly come to his title and estate by thedeath of his father. The King of France loved the father of Bertram, and?when he heard of his death he sent for his son to come immediately to his royalcourt in Paris, intending, for the friendship he bore the late count, to grace youngBertram with his esi^ecial favor and protection. Bertram was living w4th his mother, the widowed countess, when Lafeu, an oldlord of the French court, came to conduct Bertram to the king. The King ofFrance was an absolute monarch, and the invitation to court was in the form of aroyal mandate, or positive command, which no subject, of what high dignity soever,might disobey; therefore though the countess in parting with this dear son seemeda second time to bury her husband, who


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