The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Eight Volumes, Band 1 |
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Seite xxi
... their jefts are commonly grofs , and their pleafantry licentious ; neither his gentlemen nor kis ladies have much delicacy , nor are fufficiently diftinguished from his clowns by any appearance of refined manners .
... their jefts are commonly grofs , and their pleafantry licentious ; neither his gentlemen nor kis ladies have much delicacy , nor are fufficiently diftinguished from his clowns by any appearance of refined manners .
Seite lxxx
In Comedy , nothing was fo fure to Pleafe , as mean buffoonry , vile ribaldry , and unmannerly jefts of fools and clowns . Yet even in thefe , our Author's Wit buoys up , and is born above his fubject : his Genius in thofe low parts is ...
In Comedy , nothing was fo fure to Pleafe , as mean buffoonry , vile ribaldry , and unmannerly jefts of fools and clowns . Yet even in thefe , our Author's Wit buoys up , and is born above his fubject : his Genius in thofe low parts is ...
Seite lxxxviii
He himself complained of this usage in Hamlet , where he wishes that those who play the Clowns wou'd fpeak no more than is fet down for them . ( A & 3. Sc . 4. ) But as a proof that he could not escape it , in the old editions of Romeo ...
He himself complained of this usage in Hamlet , where he wishes that those who play the Clowns wou'd fpeak no more than is fet down for them . ( A & 3. Sc . 4. ) But as a proof that he could not escape it , in the old editions of Romeo ...
Seite xcv
... them have a Pretence to give the fame Crest : But Shakespear's Clowns and Fops come all of a different Houfe : they are no farther allied to one another , than gers than as Man to Man , Members of the fame Mr. THEOBALD's PREFACE .
... them have a Pretence to give the fame Crest : But Shakespear's Clowns and Fops come all of a different Houfe : they are no farther allied to one another , than gers than as Man to Man , Members of the fame Mr. THEOBALD's PREFACE .
Seite cxxvi
In his Play of The Merchant of VENICE a clown is introduced quibbling in a miferable manner , upon which one who bears the character of a man of fenfe makes the following reflection ; How every fool can play upon . a word !
In his Play of The Merchant of VENICE a clown is introduced quibbling in a miferable manner , upon which one who bears the character of a man of fenfe makes the following reflection ; How every fool can play upon . a word !
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The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Eight Volumes William Shakespeare Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2019 |
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