Shakespeare's the Tempest. With Introduction, And Notes Explanatory And Critical. for Use in Schools And Classes

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Gonza. Is not, sir, my doublet as fresh as the first day I wore it ? I mean, in a sort.
Anto. That sort was well fish'd for. 11 Gonza. When I wore it at your daughter's marriage ?
Alon. You cram these words into mine ears against The stomach of my sense. 12 Would I had never 10 Amphion, King of Thebes, was a prodigious musician : god Mercury gave him a lyre, with which he charmed the stones into their places, and thus built the walls of the city : as Wordsworth puts it, " The gift to King Am- p
...hion, that wall'd a city with its melody." Tunis is in fact supposed to be on or near the site of ancient Carthage.
11 A punning allusion, probably, to one of the meanings of sort, which was lot or portion ; from the Latin sors.
12 That is, " when the state of my feelings does not relish them, or has no appetite for them." Stomach for appetite occurs repeatedly.
80 THE TEMPEST. ACT II.
Married my daughter there ! for, coming thence, My son is lost ; and, in my rate, 13 she too, Who is so far from Italy removed, I ne'er again shall see her.


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