The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Band 7 |
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Seite 26
Again , in Ben Jonson's 134th Epigram : " Old Banks the jugler , our Pythagoras , " Grave tutor to the learned horse , " & c . The fate of this man and his very docile animal , is not exactly ARM . A most fine figure ! MOTH .
Again , in Ben Jonson's 134th Epigram : " Old Banks the jugler , our Pythagoras , " Grave tutor to the learned horse , " & c . The fate of this man and his very docile animal , is not exactly ARM . A most fine figure ! MOTH .
Seite 86
I am not of the learned commentator's opinion , that the satire of Shakspeare is so seldom personal . It is of the nature of personal invectives to be soon unintelligible ; and the author that gratifies private malice , animam in ...
I am not of the learned commentator's opinion , that the satire of Shakspeare is so seldom personal . It is of the nature of personal invectives to be soon unintelligible ; and the author that gratifies private malice , animam in ...
Seite 96
Ut , re , sol , la , mi , fa.3Under pardon , sir , what are the contents ? or , rather , as Horace says in his - What , my soul , verses ? is as deeply learned as Fauste precor gelida . " A translation of Mantuanus by George Turberville ...
Ut , re , sol , la , mi , fa.3Under pardon , sir , what are the contents ? or , rather , as Horace says in his - What , my soul , verses ? is as deeply learned as Fauste precor gelida . " A translation of Mantuanus by George Turberville ...
Seite 97
Ay , sir , and very learned . HOL . Let me hear a staff , a stanza , a verse ; Lege , domine . NATH . If love make me forsworn , how shall I swear to love ? Ah , never faith could hold , if not to beauty vowed !
Ay , sir , and very learned . HOL . Let me hear a staff , a stanza , a verse ; Lege , domine . NATH . If love make me forsworn , how shall I swear to love ? Ah , never faith could hold , if not to beauty vowed !
Seite 98
... and not without reaThe speaker here is impeaching the verses ; but Sir Nathaniel , as it appears above , thought them learned ones : besides , as Dr. Thirlby observes , almost every word of this speech fathers itself on the pedant .
... and not without reaThe speaker here is impeaching the verses ; but Sir Nathaniel , as it appears above , thought them learned ones : besides , as Dr. Thirlby observes , almost every word of this speech fathers itself on the pedant .
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affection ancient answer Antonio appears BASS Bassanio beauty believe BIRON bond BOYET called Christian comes common COST doth editions editor Enter expression eyes face fair FARMER father flesh folio fool fortune Giannetto give hand hath head hear heart heaven Henry hold Italy JOHNSON kind King lady Launcelot learned leave letter light live look lord lost MALONE manner master means mind MOTH musick nature never night observed old copies passage Perhaps play pound praise pray present printed quarto reason ring romances says SCENE seems sense Shakspeare speak stand STEEVENS suppose sweet tell term thee THEOBALD thing thou thought thousand true turn unto Venice WARBURTON word young