Works of William Shakespeare, Band 1 |
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Seite xii
... thing , it was faid that Ben Johnson borrow- ed every thing . Because Johnson did not write extempore , he was reproached with being a year about every piece ; and be- cause Shakespear wrote with ease and rapi- dity , they cryed , he ...
... thing , it was faid that Ben Johnson borrow- ed every thing . Because Johnson did not write extempore , he was reproached with being a year about every piece ; and be- cause Shakespear wrote with ease and rapi- dity , they cryed , he ...
Seite xiii
... thing Invi dious or Sparing in those verses , but wonder Mr. Dryden was of that opinion . He ex- alts him not only above all his Contempo- raries , but above Chaucer and Spenser , whom he he will not allow to be great enough to be The ...
... thing Invi dious or Sparing in those verses , but wonder Mr. Dryden was of that opinion . He ex- alts him not only above all his Contempo- raries , but above Chaucer and Spenser , whom he he will not allow to be great enough to be The ...
Seite xix
... thing which could no otherwise happen , but by their being taken from separate and piece- meal - written parts . Many verses are omitted intirely , and o- thers transposed ; from whence invincible obscurities have arisen , past the ...
... thing which could no otherwise happen , but by their being taken from separate and piece- meal - written parts . Many verses are omitted intirely , and o- thers transposed ; from whence invincible obscurities have arisen , past the ...
Seite xxi
... thing call'd the Double Fal- Shood , cannot be admitted as his . And I should conjecture of fome of the others , ( par- ticularly Love's Labour's Loft , The Winter's Tale , Comedy of Errors , and Titus Andronicus ) that only fome ...
... thing call'd the Double Fal- Shood , cannot be admitted as his . And I should conjecture of fome of the others , ( par- ticularly Love's Labour's Loft , The Winter's Tale , Comedy of Errors , and Titus Andronicus ) that only fome ...
Seite xxxi
... thing that looks like an imitati- on of the Ancients . The delicacy of his taste , and the natural bent of his own great Genius ( equal , if not fuperior to fome of the best of theirs ) would certainly have led him to read and study ...
... thing that looks like an imitati- on of the Ancients . The delicacy of his taste , and the natural bent of his own great Genius ( equal , if not fuperior to fome of the best of theirs ) would certainly have led him to read and study ...
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