The Works of Shakespeare, Band 1Printed at the Clarendon Press, 1770 |
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Seite xv
... nature . It is remarkable too , that the praise he gives him in his Difcoveries feems to proceed from a perfonal kindness ; he tells us that he lov'd the man , as well as honoured his memory ; celebrates the honesty , openness , and ...
... nature . It is remarkable too , that the praise he gives him in his Difcoveries feems to proceed from a perfonal kindness ; he tells us that he lov'd the man , as well as honoured his memory ; celebrates the honesty , openness , and ...
Seite xvi
... nature and kinds of these are enumerated and confidered , I dare to say that not Shakefpear only , but Ariftotle or Cicero , had their works undergone the fame fate , might have appear'd to want sense as well as learning . It is not ...
... nature and kinds of these are enumerated and confidered , I dare to say that not Shakefpear only , but Ariftotle or Cicero , had their works undergone the fame fate , might have appear'd to want sense as well as learning . It is not ...
Seite xxiv
... nature so large a share in what he did , that , for aught I know , the performances of his youth , as they were the most vigorous , and had the most fire and ftrength of imagination in them , were the best . I would not be thought by ...
... nature so large a share in what he did , that , for aught I know , the performances of his youth , as they were the most vigorous , and had the most fire and ftrength of imagination in them , were the best . I would not be thought by ...
Seite xxvi
... nature muft certainly have inclined all the gentler part of the world to love him , as the power of his wit obliged the men of the most delicate knowledge and polite learning to admire him . His acquaintance with Ben . Jonfon began with ...
... nature muft certainly have inclined all the gentler part of the world to love him , as the power of his wit obliged the men of the most delicate knowledge and polite learning to admire him . His acquaintance with Ben . Jonfon began with ...
Seite xxvii
... nature gave the latter , was more than a balance for what books had given the former : and the judgment of a great man upon this occafion was , I think , very juit and proper . In a converfation between fir John Suckling , fir William D ...
... nature gave the latter , was more than a balance for what books had given the former : and the judgment of a great man upon this occafion was , I think , very juit and proper . In a converfation between fir John Suckling , fir William D ...
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