Introduction to ShakespeareBooks for Libraries Press, 1895 - 136 Seiten |
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Seite 6
... means were first waxing and then rapidly waning , his family had increased in numbers . His son Gilbert , who afterwards became a haberdasher in London and who lived certainly to 1609 , was born in 1566 ; Joan , who was married to ...
... means were first waxing and then rapidly waning , his family had increased in numbers . His son Gilbert , who afterwards became a haberdasher in London and who lived certainly to 1609 , was born in 1566 ; Joan , who was married to ...
Seite 7
... means in the household , William Shakespeare at the age of thirteen may , as the tradition asserts , have been set to help his father in business . An old parish clerk of Stratford towards the close of the seventeenth century declared ...
... means in the household , William Shakespeare at the age of thirteen may , as the tradition asserts , have been set to help his father in business . An old parish clerk of Stratford towards the close of the seventeenth century declared ...
Seite 8
... means of ascertaining . Shakespeare's eldest child - Susanna - was baptized on May 26 , 1583 , just six months after the bond , preliminary to ( 789 ) MARRIAGE . 9 marriage , had been signed . The 8 INTRODUCTION TO SHAKESPEARE .
... means of ascertaining . Shakespeare's eldest child - Susanna - was baptized on May 26 , 1583 , just six months after the bond , preliminary to ( 789 ) MARRIAGE . 9 marriage , had been signed . The 8 INTRODUCTION TO SHAKESPEARE .
Seite 18
... mean house in Dowgate , attended by a shoemaker's wife , his kind hostess and nurse . The pamphlet must have been written in August , 1592. Having warned his friends Marlowe , Peele , and " young Juvenal " ( probably Lodge ) against the ...
... mean house in Dowgate , attended by a shoemaker's wife , his kind hostess and nurse . The pamphlet must have been written in August , 1592. Having warned his friends Marlowe , Peele , and " young Juvenal " ( probably Lodge ) against the ...
Seite 46
... mean surround- ings and made it poetical . Not that they despised buffooneries and horseplay as modes of raising a laugh , but they did not rest content with these . SHAKESPEARE'S PREDECESSORS . 47 Amid the sordid haunts and coarse 46 ...
... mean surround- ings and made it poetical . Not that they despised buffooneries and horseplay as modes of raising a laugh , but they did not rest content with these . SHAKESPEARE'S PREDECESSORS . 47 Amid the sordid haunts and coarse 46 ...
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