The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, Band 1R. C. and J. Rivington, 1821 |
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Seite xvii
... stage . Advancing in his progress to excellence , we shall probably be led to fix upon the mid- dle period of his life , as the time when his genius was at its meridian . The productions that followed , although every way worthy of ...
... stage . Advancing in his progress to excellence , we shall probably be led to fix upon the mid- dle period of his life , as the time when his genius was at its meridian . The productions that followed , although every way worthy of ...
Seite xxi
... Stage , with his own corrections , and the addition of some very curious Some valuable documents which had escaped my attention at the time when this part of the work was printed off , are preserved among the Addenda , in the twenty ...
... Stage , with his own corrections , and the addition of some very curious Some valuable documents which had escaped my attention at the time when this part of the work was printed off , are preserved among the Addenda , in the twenty ...
Seite xxviii
... stage , and had this portrait painted , which , as you will perceive , was richly set , and was care- fully preserved by his descendants , till it came to the hands of his great grand - son , the poet , who , dying in 1742 , without ...
... stage , and had this portrait painted , which , as you will perceive , was richly set , and was care- fully preserved by his descendants , till it came to the hands of his great grand - son , the poet , who , dying in 1742 , without ...
Seite xxxiv
... stage , and bringing out this very play ! " There can be no difficulty in believing it to be the same Mr. Malone who drew up this paragraph , when he had acquired information of which he was not possessed before . He introduces his ...
... stage , and bringing out this very play ! " There can be no difficulty in believing it to be the same Mr. Malone who drew up this paragraph , when he had acquired information of which he was not possessed before . He introduces his ...
Seite xxxviii
... stage so many years ! " Mr. Malone has nowhere said , that All Is Truth must be Shakspeare's Henry VIII . for the reason here given . He speaks with less confidence on the subject than Mr. Tyrwhitt ; but mentions , indeed , that the ...
... stage so many years ! " Mr. Malone has nowhere said , that All Is Truth must be Shakspeare's Henry VIII . for the reason here given . He speaks with less confidence on the subject than Mr. Tyrwhitt ; but mentions , indeed , that the ...
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