“The” Plays Of William Shakespeare, Band 1T. Bensley, 1778 |
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Seite 3
... fure , and are therefore praised only as pleasure is obtained ; yet , thus unaffifted by intereft or paffion , they have past through variations of tafte and changes of manners , and , as they devolved from one generation to another ...
... fure , and are therefore praised only as pleasure is obtained ; yet , thus unaffifted by intereft or paffion , they have past through variations of tafte and changes of manners , and , as they devolved from one generation to another ...
Seite 19
... fure to lead him out of his way , and füre to engulf him in the mire . It has fome malignant power over his mind , and its fafcinations are irrefifti- ble . Whatever be the dignity or profundity of his difquifition , whether he be ...
... fure to lead him out of his way , and füre to engulf him in the mire . It has fome malignant power over his mind , and its fafcinations are irrefifti- ble . Whatever be the dignity or profundity of his difquifition , whether he be ...
Seite 46
... times haftily makes what a little more attention would have found . He is folicitous to reduce to grammar , what he could not be fure that his author intended to to be grammatical . Shakespeare regarded more the series of 46 PREFACE .
... times haftily makes what a little more attention would have found . He is folicitous to reduce to grammar , what he could not be fure that his author intended to to be grammatical . Shakespeare regarded more the series of 46 PREFACE .
Seite 49
... fure without bitterness of malice , and , I hope , without wantonnefs of insult . It is no pleasure to me , in revifing my volumes , to observe how much paper is wafted in confutation . Whoever confiders the revolutions of learning ...
... fure without bitterness of malice , and , I hope , without wantonnefs of insult . It is no pleasure to me , in revifing my volumes , to observe how much paper is wafted in confutation . Whoever confiders the revolutions of learning ...
Seite 73
... future editor . An author , who catches ( as Pope expreffes it ) at the Cynthia of a minute , and does not furnish notes to his own works , is fure to lose half the praise which he might have claimed , had he dealt in allufions lefs ...
... future editor . An author , who catches ( as Pope expreffes it ) at the Cynthia of a minute , and does not furnish notes to his own works , is fure to lose half the praise which he might have claimed , had he dealt in allufions lefs ...
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againſt ancient becauſe Caius Caliban comedy copies Cymbeline defire Duke edition editor Engliſh Enter Exeunt expreffion faid Falſtaff fame fatire fcene feems fenfe fhall fhew fhould fignifies fince firft firſt fome fometimes Ford fpeak fpirit ftage ftand ftill fubject fuch fufficient fuppofe fure Gentlemen of Verona hath Henry Henry IV Henry VI Hiftory himſelf Hoft humour JOHNSON Jonfon King laft Laun lefs loft lord Macbeth mafter miftrefs miſtreſs moft moſt muft muſt myſelf obferved occafion paffage paffion perfon play pleaſe pleaſure poet prefent printed Profpero Protheus publiſhed quarto Quic reafon reft Romeo and Juliet ſcene ſeems Shakeſpeare ſhall Silvia Sir John Slen ſpeak ſtage STEEVENS thee thefe themſelves Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou Thurio Titus Andronicus tragedy tranflated Twelfth Night uſed WARBURTON whofe WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE Windfor word