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Arden Shakespeare Library

The Arden Dictionary of Shakespeare Quotations (Arden Shakespeare) by Jane Armstrong

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In this enjoyable addition to the renowned Arden Shakespeare series, approximately 3000 quotations, both familiar and little-known, are drawn from throughout Shakespeare's work, both plays and poems. Quotations are selected for their intrinsic interest and organised by topic, as being both user-friendly and stimulating for the casual reader, with speaker and play reference, and with some annotation to give a context to the quotation. Brief general introduction outlining the purpose and use of the volume Shakespeare biography Chronology of plays Selections from Arden glossary

Hardcover

First published October 14, 1999

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About the author

Katherine Duncan-Jones

25 books10 followers
Katherine Dorothea Duncan-Jones, FRSL (13 May 1941 – 16 October 2022) was an English literature and Shakespeare scholar and was also a Fellow of New Hall, Cambridge, and then Somerville College, Oxford. She was also Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford from 1998 to 2001. She was a scholar of Shakespeare and his contemporaries.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for Richard.
580 reviews5 followers
July 27, 2014
Not really a book to read of course but it's a great piece of reference and to make you sound really clever (or maybe just hugely pretentious!).

I love the way the book is laid out and indexed for ease of reference. It's a dictionary so it's in alphabetical order of subject. For example food ('Tis an ill cook that cannot lick his own fingers'), horses (I had rather had my horse to my mistress' etc etc.

It makes you realise how bloody brilliant Shakespeare was. Most great writers might have one or two classic works, Shakespeare had perhaps ten to twenty and even the others are pretty good. Of course he was not writing for posterity. He did it for the classic reasons, money and the ladies.

Pick up this dictionary and turn to any page and find something that has either seeped into the English language and now by extension the world and just 'hits the spot.' I going to do that now:

P.128 Hunting: 'The Game is up'
p.45 Cruelty: 'I will speak daggers to her but use none'
p.275 Summer: 'Now these hot days is the mad blood stirring'
p.118 Hatred: 'In time we hate what which we often fear'

I could go on but you have lives to lead.

Shakespeare: There's a reason you might have loved or suffered him at school and kids do to this day. He is a genius. And most of his work was drama so watch it rather than reading it.

Sermon over!
Profile Image for Joe Erickson.
15 reviews2 followers
December 21, 2013
I have been quite the Shakespeare-phile ever since high school and have always wanted to find an accurate summary of quotes. You would think there would be more available but this book is arranged well based on topic/subject, making obtaining the right quote for the right situation possible. While this was given to me as a gift from my wife and daughter, I think the price is excellent for a book of this breadth and depth. Highly recommended.
Profile Image for Gelassenheit.
19 reviews
December 2, 2017
It's not a book you read from back to back. It's one of those you pick from time to time to savour pages or passages.
One has to truly admire Shakespear's wit or whoever wrote his plays ;)
Great stuff.
Profile Image for Ms Sweetish Tema.
6 reviews1 follower
April 28, 2011
Could not have for a more satisfying source for everything that is Shakespearean!
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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