The Works of William Shakespeare: The Plays Edited from the Folio of MDCXXIII, with Various Readings from All the Editions and All the Commentators, Notes, Introductory Remarks, a Historical Sketch of the Text, an Account of the Rise and Progress of the English Drama, a Memoir of the Poet, and an Essay Upon the Genius, Band 1Little, Brown, 1868 |
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Seite ix
... true , and not so faithful and pains- taking as it behooved them to be ; but having some right to , and ( as play - publishing went in those days ) no little fitness for , the office which they assumed . Their edition is , indeed , so ...
... true , and not so faithful and pains- taking as it behooved them to be ; but having some right to , and ( as play - publishing went in those days ) no little fitness for , the office which they assumed . Their edition is , indeed , so ...
Seite x
... true lovers of Shake- speare , men of intelligence and no little acquaintance with literature , remark with gravity that it is danger- ous to disturb the text . The text ! what text ? That of the folio , which , in scores of passages ...
... true lovers of Shake- speare , men of intelligence and no little acquaintance with literature , remark with gravity that it is danger- ous to disturb the text . The text ! what text ? That of the folio , which , in scores of passages ...
Seite xi
... true , though in a greater degree , of all those plays which first appeared in that form ? The text of the Variorum of 1821 , and read , for instance , as people read for twenty - five years , " So much uncurable her garboils ...
... true , though in a greater degree , of all those plays which first appeared in that form ? The text of the Variorum of 1821 , and read , for instance , as people read for twenty - five years , " So much uncurable her garboils ...
Seite xxxi
... true poet , as a sealed book . To explain such phrases is to insult the reader by implying his incapacity of poetic apprehension ; while to go about justifying them is to assume the right of depriving the poet of part of his power as a ...
... true poet , as a sealed book . To explain such phrases is to insult the reader by implying his incapacity of poetic apprehension ; while to go about justifying them is to assume the right of depriving the poet of part of his power as a ...
Seite xxxvii
... true signification of the term is , a brave , dashing , overbearing fellow , seems to me to be decided by these lines from the Prologue to Sedley's Bellamira , 4to , 1687 , which I have met with since the proofs of this play were ...
... true signification of the term is , a brave , dashing , overbearing fellow , seems to me to be decided by these lines from the Prologue to Sedley's Bellamira , 4to , 1687 , which I have met with since the proofs of this play were ...
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Adonis appears beauty Ben Jonson blood called character cheeks Collatine Collier comedy critics death dost doth dramatic dramatist edition editor Elizabethan era English eyes fair father fear folio foul genius give Gorboduc Hamlet hand hast hath heart honour John Shakespeare Julius Cæsar King Henry King Lear kiss labors lines lips live London look Lord love's Lucrece mind miracle-plays never night Note old copies passage Passionate Pilgrim personages plays poem poet poor praise printed published quarto quoth reader Robert Arden seems Shake shame shew sonnets sorrow soul speak speare speare's stage Stratford style sweet Tarquin tears tell theatre thee thine thing Thomas Thomas Lucy thou art thought thyself tion Titus Andronicus tongue Tragedy traits Troilus and Cressida true truth unto Venus and Adonis verse Warwickshire William Shakespeare words writing written youth