The Works of Shakespeare, Band 1Printed at the Clarendon Press, 1770 |
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Seite viii
... these , laughter and fpleen , are no lefs at his command that he is not more a master of the great , than of the ridiculous in human nature ; of our nobleft tendernesses , than of our vainest foibles ; of our strongest emotions , than ...
... these , laughter and fpleen , are no lefs at his command that he is not more a master of the great , than of the ridiculous in human nature ; of our nobleft tendernesses , than of our vainest foibles ; of our strongest emotions , than ...
Seite ix
... these great excellencies , he has almost as great defects ; and that as he has certainly written better , fo he has , perhaps , written worse , than any other . But I think , I can in fome measure account for thefe defects , from ...
... these great excellencies , he has almost as great defects ; and that as he has certainly written better , fo he has , perhaps , written worse , than any other . But I think , I can in fome measure account for thefe defects , from ...
Seite x
... these , our author's wit buoys up , and is born above his fubject : his genius in thofe low parts is like fome prince of a romance in the disguise of a fhepherd or peafant ; a certain greatness and spirit now and then break out , which ...
... these , our author's wit buoys up , and is born above his fubject : his genius in thofe low parts is like fome prince of a romance in the disguise of a fhepherd or peafant ; a certain greatness and spirit now and then break out , which ...
Seite xiv
... these two great poets were good friends , and lived on amicable terms and in offices of fociety with each other . It is an acknowledged fact , that Ben . Jonfon was introduced upon the stage , and his firft works encouraged , by ...
... these two great poets were good friends , and lived on amicable terms and in offices of fociety with each other . It is an acknowledged fact , that Ben . Jonfon was introduced upon the stage , and his firft works encouraged , by ...
Seite xv
... these editions their ignorance fhines almost in every page ; nothing is more common than Actus tertia . Exit omnes . Enter three witches folus . Their French is as bad as their Latin , both in construction and spelling : their very ...
... these editions their ignorance fhines almost in every page ; nothing is more common than Actus tertia . Exit omnes . Enter three witches folus . Their French is as bad as their Latin , both in construction and spelling : their very ...
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