Critical Notes On Shakespeares Histories And Tragedies

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Critical Notes On Shakespeares Histories And Tragedies
John G Orger
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We have a similar union of two distinct senses in Twelfth Night, i, I, 5, where he paraphrases the " zephyr, " by the complex idea of fragrance and sound together, calling it "sweet sound. " " Goings " is a Scriptural term, as in Psalm xvii, 5, "O hold thou up my 'goings' in thy paths, " and is used for " walking " in Lear, iii, 2, 94, " Going shall be used with feet. " And whatever our translators understood by the words, they have made the same union of sound and motion in the well-known vers...e 2 Samuel, v, 24, " When thou hearest a sound of a going in the tops of the mulberry trees. " Sf/AKSPERE'S HISTORIES AND TRAGEDIES. 67 ROMEO AND JULIET.
Act i, scene I, line 183 Why, such is love's trangression. Griefs of my own lie heavy in my breast ; Which thou wilt propagate, to have it prest With more of thine.
Romeo declares that his friend's compassion for his distress, so far from removing it, increases it by the sense that he is the cause of sorrow in another This love that thou hast shown, Doth add more grief to too much of my own.


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