The Works of Shakespear: In Nine Volumes ; with a Glossary, Band 1J. and P. Knapton ... [et. al], 1748 |
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Seite iv
... thought it worth be- ing made publick ; and be , who bath with diffi- culty yielded to their perfwafions , is far from defiring to reflect upon the late Editors for the omiffions and defects which they left to be fup- plied by others ...
... thought it worth be- ing made publick ; and be , who bath with diffi- culty yielded to their perfwafions , is far from defiring to reflect upon the late Editors for the omiffions and defects which they left to be fup- plied by others ...
Seite vii
... thought it glory enough to diftinguish themselves in either . Since therefore other nations have taken care to dignify the works of their most celebrated Poets with the fairest impreffions beautified with the ornaments of fculpture ...
... thought it glory enough to diftinguish themselves in either . Since therefore other nations have taken care to dignify the works of their most celebrated Poets with the fairest impreffions beautified with the ornaments of fculpture ...
Seite xi
... thoughts : So that he feems to have known the world by Intuition , to have look'd thro ' human nature at one glance , and to be the only Author that gives ground for a very new opinion , That the Philo fopher and even the Man of the ...
... thoughts : So that he feems to have known the world by Intuition , to have look'd thro ' human nature at one glance , and to be the only Author that gives ground for a very new opinion , That the Philo fopher and even the Man of the ...
Seite xii
... 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 , no lefs implicitly than if it had been true History . To judge ...
... 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 , no lefs implicitly than if it had been true History . To judge ...
Seite xiii
... thought a praise to Shakespear , that he fcarce ever blotted a line . This they induftriously propa- gated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Johnson in his Discoveries , and from the preface of Heminges and Condell to the first ...
... thought a praise to Shakespear , that he fcarce ever blotted a line . This they induftriously propa- gated , as appears from what we are told by Ben Johnson in his Discoveries , and from the preface of Heminges and Condell to the first ...
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The Works of Shakespear: In Six Volumes, Volume 6 Nicholas Rowe,Thomas Hanmer, Sir Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2015 |
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