The Works of Shakespear: In Nine Volumes ; with a Glossary, Band 1 |
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Seite iv
Thus by degrees the work growing more confiderable than was at firft expected , they who had the opportunity of looking into it , too partial perhaps in their judgment , thought it worth being made publick ; and be , who hath with ...
Thus by degrees the work growing more confiderable than was at firft expected , they who had the opportunity of looking into it , too partial perhaps in their judgment , thought it worth being made publick ; and be , who hath with ...
Seite vii
... their natures from each other ; and who may be faid without partiality to have equalled , if not excelled , in both kinds the beft writers of any age or country who have thought it glory enough to diftinguish themselves in either .
... their natures from each other ; and who may be faid without partiality to have equalled , if not excelled , in both kinds the beft writers of any age or country who have thought it glory enough to diftinguish themselves in either .
Seite xi
This is perfectly amazing , from a man of no education or experience in those great and publick scenes of life which are ufually the fubject of his thoughts : So that he feems to have known the world by Intuition , to have look'd`thro ...
This is perfectly amazing , from a man of no education or experience in those great and publick scenes of life which are ufually the fubject of his thoughts : So that he feems to have known the world by Intuition , to have look'd`thro ...
Seite xii
Till then , our Authors had no thoughts of writ ing on the model of the Ancients : their Tragedies were only Hiftories in Dialogue ; and their Comedies followed the thread of any Novel as they found it ...
Till then , our Authors had no thoughts of writ ing on the model of the Ancients : their Tragedies were only Hiftories in Dialogue ; and their Comedies followed the thread of any Novel as they found it ...
Seite xiii
By thefe men it was thought a praise to Shakespear , that he fcarce ever blotted a line . This they induftriously propagated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Johnson in his Difcoveries , and from the preface of Heminges and ...
By thefe men it was thought a praise to Shakespear , that he fcarce ever blotted a line . This they induftriously propagated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Johnson in his Difcoveries , and from the preface of Heminges and ...
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