Reasons for a new edition of Shakespeare's works, Band 2 |
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Seite 22
... notice that he had done so , ) was the very reason why Shakespeare wrote the contrary . Where no alteration is absolutely necessary , we are apt to consider the poet the best judge of the mode in which he will express himself . window ...
... notice that he had done so , ) was the very reason why Shakespeare wrote the contrary . Where no alteration is absolutely necessary , we are apt to consider the poet the best judge of the mode in which he will express himself . window ...
Seite 25
... therefore a wilful corruption of the text , without any notice that a variation had been made from the old and authentic reading of the play . ( as well as the others we have noticed ) 66 THE TAMING OF THE SHREW . " 25.
... therefore a wilful corruption of the text , without any notice that a variation had been made from the old and authentic reading of the play . ( as well as the others we have noticed ) 66 THE TAMING OF THE SHREW . " 25.
Seite 27
... notice , or omitted without rea- son ; but one striking proof of extreme carelessness we cannot refrain from pointing out : it occurs at the close of act iv . , where Hortensio says- " Well , Petruchio , this has put me in heart . Have ...
... notice , or omitted without rea- son ; but one striking proof of extreme carelessness we cannot refrain from pointing out : it occurs at the close of act iv . , where Hortensio says- " Well , Petruchio , this has put me in heart . Have ...
Seite 30
... notice is utterly inexcusable . What is often to be complained of is , that the editors of Shakespeare have not availed themselves of the ordinary means in their power for rendering his verse such as we may presume he intended it to be ...
... notice is utterly inexcusable . What is often to be complained of is , that the editors of Shakespeare have not availed themselves of the ordinary means in their power for rendering his verse such as we may presume he intended it to be ...
Seite 32
... notice , by means of an apostrophe , would often have to correct his own mistakes of perusal , and to repeat a line in which he had disregarded the metre . If anything were lost by the insertion of apostrophes , employed by our greatest ...
... notice , by means of an apostrophe , would often have to correct his own mistakes of perusal , and to repeat a line in which he had disregarded the metre . If anything were lost by the insertion of apostrophes , employed by our greatest ...
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adduce All's ascertain Ben Jonson bestowed biography of Shakespeare blunder collation COLLIER comedy conjecture corrections dramas dramatist Duke of Devonshire EDITION OF SHAKESPEARE'S Edward Alleyn England's Parnassus errors evidence folio editions Gentlemen of Verona Henry hitherto impressions inserted instance Jonson kind king Leontes Lord Francis Egerton Love Labours Won Lucrece Malone Malone's Shakespeare manuscript Merchant of Venice Meres metre minute and patient mistake necessary never notice octavo old copies omitted original passage patient accuracy performed Plays and Poems poet poetry printed printer produced projected edition published quarto editions reader reason reference regarding the text reprint resort respect Richard Richard II sear'd settle the text Shake Shakespeare by Boswell Shakespeare's plays Shrew Sonnets speare speare's Steevens substituted Taming text of Shakespeare thou tion Titus Andronicus Troilus and Cressida true reading Twelfth Night undertaking Venus and Adonis volume Winter's Tale word written
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 16 - This manuscript is not older than the end of the seventeenth or beginning of the eighteenth century, and...
Seite 7 - O heavens ! Why does my blood thus muster to my heart, Making both it unable for itself, And dispossessing all my other parts Of necessary fitness...
Seite 48 - This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle, This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars, This other Eden, demi-paradise, This fortress built by Nature for herself Against infection and the hand of war, This happy breed of men, this little world, This precious stone set in the silver sea...
Seite 38 - CARE-CHARMER sleep ! Sweet ease in restless misery ! The captive's liberty, and his freedom's song ! Balm of the bruised heart ! Man's chief felicity ! Brother of quiet death, when life is too too long! A comedy it is, and now an history ; What is not sleep unto the feeble mind ! It easeth him that toils and him that's sorry ; It makes the deaf to hear, to see the blind ; Ungentle sleep, thou helpest all but me ! For when I sleep my soul is vexed most.
Seite 3 - Reasons for a New Edition of Shakespeare's Works, containing Notices of the Defects of Former Impressions, and Pointing out the Lately Acquired Means of Illustrating the Plays, Poems, and Biography of the Poet.
Seite 14 - THE MERCHANT OF VENICE A LEGEND OF ITALY * * * Of the Merchant of Venice there are two 4to editions in 1600, one by Heyes and the other by Roberts. The Duke of Devonshire and Lord Francis Egerton have copies of the edition by Heyes, and they vary importantly. * * * It must be acknowledged that this is a very easy and happy emendation, which does not admit of a moment's doubt or dispute. * * * Readers in general are not...
Seite 19 - Heyes, and they vary importantly. * * * It must be acknowledged that this is a very easy and happy emendation, which does not admit of a moment's doubt or dispute. * * * Readers in general are not at all aware of the nonsense they have in many cases been accustomed to receive as the genuine text of Shakspeare ! Reasons for a New Edition of Shakspeare 's Works, by J.
Seite 16 - ... understood. * * These corrections in the margin of the printed portion of the folio, are probably as old as the reign of Charles I. Whether they were merely conjectural, or were made from original MSS. of the plays to which the individual might have had access, it is not perhaps possible to ascertain ; it has been stated, these verbal, and sometimes literal, annotations, are only found in a few of the plays in the commencement of the volume, and from what follows, it will be a matter of deep...
Seite 33 - ... tract, did we not know that only a single copy of it (as far as has been ascertained by the most diligent inquiries during the last thirty or forty years) exists in any public or private collection. Were it, therefore, of less value than it really possesses, as a curious picture of manners, towards the end of the reign of Elizabeth, and in the beginning of that of James I., we should be disposed to reprint it, in order to place it beyond the possibility of destruction.