| [Frontispiece]—“Eyes, look your last!Arms, take your last embrace!” |
| [Title-Page] | |
| PAGE |
| Heading to Introduction | [vii] |
| “Some have greatness thrust upon them” | [xiv] |
| Heading to Contents | [xv] |
| ” Illustrations | [xix] |
| Ariel and Caliban | [ 1] |
| “What?... Put thy sword up, traitor!” | [ 7] |
| “I love and honour you beyond all limit” | [12] |
| “Now let us take our leave” | [27] |
| “Go, get you gone, and let the papers lie” | [32] |
| “Go, base intruder! Overweening slave!” | [38] |
| “Treacherous man! Thou hast beguiled my hopes!” | [49] |
| Cupid’s trap | [54] |
| “Yet tell her of it; hear what she will say” | [66] |
| “A thousand times good-night” | [71] |
| “There, Leonato, take her back again” | [73] |
| Puck in mischief | [82] |
| “What thou seest when thou dost wake” | [93] |
| “Lysander!... Alack, where are you?” | [94] |
| “O, how I love thee! How I doat on thee!” | [97] |
| “Methought I was—no man could tell what I was” | [103] |
| On the Rialto | [104] |
| “For these courtesies I’ll lend you thus much money” | [108] |
| “Tarry a little: there is something else” | [125] |
| “And for your love I’ll take this ring from you” | [129] |
| In the Forest of Arden | [133] |
| “We’ll have a martial outside” | [141] |
| “It is ten o’clock” | [145] |
| “Hang there, my verse” | [149] |
| Audrey, the goatherd | [150] |
| “And your experience makes you sad?” | [153] |
| Katharine and Petruchio | [158] |
| “Fear not, they shall not touch thee, Kate” | [165] |
| “What’s this? A sleeve?” | [169] |
| “Come, Kate!... Good-night!” | [175] |
| The Duel | [176] |
| “Look you, sir. Is it not well done?” | [181] |
| “Farewell, dear heart, since I must needs be gone” | [187] |
| “I have no exquisite reason” | [188] |
| “I am no fighter” | [199] |
| In Friar Laurence’s cell | [210] |
| “Romeo, arise; thou wilt be taken!” | [229] |
| “O, I am slain!” | [241] |
| The Weird Sisters | [245] |
| “Infirm of purpose! Give me the daggers!” | [257] |
| “What is this that rises like the issue of a king?” | [271] |
| “Lay on, Macduff!” | [281] |
| “The wood began to move” | [282] |
| She floated down the stream | [283] |
| “Sleeping within my orchard” | [289] |
| “How now! A rat? Dead, for a ducat, dead!” | [315] |
| “Do you not come your tardy son to chide?” | [319] |
| “Contending with the fretful elements” | [335] |
| “There she stands” | [339] |
| “You heavens, give me that patience” | [347] |
| “Blow, winds! Rage! Blow!” | [351] |
| She would come to listen to Othello | [360] |
| “Ay, smile upon her” | [368] |
| “An excellent song!” | [370] |
| “Villain, be sure you prove my love untrue!” | [379] |
| “Upon my knees, what doth your speech import?” | [383] |
| “I told him what I thought” | [388] |
| The lid was lifted, and a man stepped forth | [391] |
| “Best draw my sword” | [406] |
| “Good masters, harm me not!” | [409] |
| “Thou thy worldly task hast done” | [414] |
| “Good luck! What have we here?” | [422] |
| “She commends it to your blessing” | [426] |
| “O, thus she stood when first I wooed her!” | [441] |
| By law condemned to die | [445] |
| “How comes it that you are thus estranged?” | [451] |
| “I see my son Antipholus” | [457] |
| “I see by you I am a sweet-faced youth” | [459] |
| Initials, tailpieces, etc., etc. |