The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumen1J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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... LABOUR'S LOST . MERCHANT OF VENICE . VOL . VIII . AS YOU LIKE IT . ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL . VOL . IX . TAMING OF THE SHREW . WINTER'S TALE . MACBETH . KING JOHN . VOL . X. VOL . XI . KING RICHARD II . KING HENRY IV . Part I. VOL ...
... LABOUR'S LOST . MERCHANT OF VENICE . VOL . VIII . AS YOU LIKE IT . ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL . VOL . IX . TAMING OF THE SHREW . WINTER'S TALE . MACBETH . KING JOHN . VOL . X. VOL . XI . KING RICHARD II . KING HENRY IV . Part I. VOL ...
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... labours of men of such high estimation as Rowe , Pope , Warburton , Johnson , Farmer , and Steevens , with others of inferior name , the rank of Shak- speare in the poetical world is not a point at this time subject to controversy . His ...
... labours of men of such high estimation as Rowe , Pope , Warburton , Johnson , Farmer , and Steevens , with others of inferior name , the rank of Shak- speare in the poetical world is not a point at this time subject to controversy . His ...
Página xiii
... labours . His first residence was in the Temple , afterwards at Hampton , and lastly at Hampstead , where he continued near thirty years . In this retreat his life passed in one unbroken tenor , with scarce any variation , except an ...
... labours . His first residence was in the Temple , afterwards at Hampton , and lastly at Hampstead , where he continued near thirty years . In this retreat his life passed in one unbroken tenor , with scarce any variation , except an ...
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... labour such atoms of intelligence have been col lected . That the foregoing information , however , may communicate no alarm , or induce the reader to suppose we have " bestowed our whole tedious- ness " on him , we should add , that ...
... labour such atoms of intelligence have been col lected . That the foregoing information , however , may communicate no alarm , or induce the reader to suppose we have " bestowed our whole tedious- ness " on him , we should add , that ...
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... labour ; for if we are permitted to avail ourselves of every typographical mistake , and every provincial vulgarism and of- fence against established grammar , that may be met with in the coëval productions of irregular humourists and ...
... labour ; for if we are permitted to avail ourselves of every typographical mistake , and every provincial vulgarism and of- fence against established grammar , that may be met with in the coëval productions of irregular humourists and ...
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Términos y frases comunes
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