The Works of Shakespeare, Band 1Printed at the Clarendon Press, 1770 |
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Seite vii
... nature ; it proceeded through Egyptian ftrainers and channels , and came to him not without fome tincture of the learning , or fome caft of the models , of thofe before him . The b poetry I ; 1 V A X poetry of Shakespear was infpiration ...
... nature ; it proceeded through Egyptian ftrainers and channels , and came to him not without fome tincture of the learning , or fome caft of the models , of thofe before him . The b poetry I ; 1 V A X poetry of Shakespear was infpiration ...
Seite viii
... nature ; and ' tis not so just to say , that he speaks from her , as that she speaks through him . HIS . characters are fo much nature herself , that ' tis a fort of jnjury to call them by fo diftant a name as copies of her . Those of ...
... nature ; and ' tis not so just to say , that he speaks from her , as that she speaks through him . HIS . characters are fo much nature herself , that ' tis a fort of jnjury to call them by fo diftant a name as copies of her . Those of ...
Seite ix
... nature at one glance , and to be the only author that gives ground for a very new opinion , that the philofopher , and even the man of the world , may be born , as well as the poet . Ir must be own'd , that with all these great ...
... nature at one glance , and to be the only author that gives ground for a very new opinion , that the philofopher , and even the man of the world , may be born , as well as the poet . Ir must be own'd , that with all these great ...
Seite xiii
... nature , or branch of fcience , he either fpeaks of or defcribes ; it is always with competent if not extenfive knowledge : his descriptions are still exact ; all his metaphors appropriated , and remarkably drawn from the true nature ...
... nature , or branch of fcience , he either fpeaks of or defcribes ; it is always with competent if not extenfive knowledge : his descriptions are still exact ; all his metaphors appropriated , and remarkably drawn from the true nature ...
Seite xiv
William Shakespeare. ever the nature of parties to be in extremes ; and nothing is fo probable , as that because Ben . Jonfon had much the most learning , it was faid , on the one hand , that Shakespear had none at all ; and because ...
William Shakespeare. ever the nature of parties to be in extremes ; and nothing is fo probable , as that because Ben . Jonfon had much the most learning , it was faid , on the one hand , that Shakespear had none at all ; and because ...
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