Page:Romeo and Juliet (1917) Yale.djvu/149

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Romeo and Juliet
137

iii. 15 Here: Hence

40 ff. Cr. omits 40 and in 41 reads: Flies may do this, but, etc. (Q1). The QqFf are confused; the arrangement in the text is that of Daniel.

51 a little speak: but speak a word

76 simpleness: wilfulness

84–89 Cr. gives these lines to the Friar

112 And: Or

iv. 8 times: time

34 very: very, very

v. 43 Love . . . friend: My lord, my love, my friend

150 chopt-logic: chop-logic

IV. i. 7 talk: talk'd, Q1, 5

78 any: yonder

81 hide: shut

94 distilling: distilled

ii. 22 to: and, Pope

iv. 6 Go: Go, go, Theobald

V. iii. 170 rust: rest

194 your: our, Johnson

271 to: in


APPENDIX D

Suggestions for Collateral Reading

Besides the invaluable edition of Romeo and Juliet in the Variorum Shakespeare (ed. H. H. Furness), the following are among the more suggestive of the books containing critical comment on the play:


Mrs. Jameson, Characteristics of Women (1833);

S. T. Coleridge, Literary Remains (1886);

S. T. Coleridge, Notes and Lectures upon Shakespeare (1849).

Wm. Poel, The Stage-Version of Romeo and Juliet, Trans. of the New Shakspere Society (1887); reprinted in Shakespeare in the Theatre (1913);

S. A. Brooke, On Ten Plays of Shakespeare (1905).