The Plays of William Shakspeare ... |
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Página 6
Rabelais , with a strain of buffoon humour , that equals the fober elegance of this paffage in our poet , calls the finall gentry of France , " Gentilhommes de bas relief . " WARBURTON . I know not why fo harth a word fhould be admitted ...
Rabelais , with a strain of buffoon humour , that equals the fober elegance of this paffage in our poet , calls the finall gentry of France , " Gentilhommes de bas relief . " WARBURTON . I know not why fo harth a word fhould be admitted ...
Página 9
This paffage feems to have been imitated by Milton . Paradife Loft , B. 1c . - 896 . MALONE . 9 Too high to be enthrall'd to love . ] This reading poffeffes all the editions , but carries no just meaning in it .
This paffage feems to have been imitated by Milton . Paradife Loft , B. 1c . - 896 . MALONE . 9 Too high to be enthrall'd to love . ] This reading poffeffes all the editions , but carries no just meaning in it .
Página 20
This paffage fhews how the want of women on the old ftage was fupplied . If they had not a young man who could perform the part with a face that might pafs for feminine , the character was acted in a mask , which was at that time a part ...
This paffage fhews how the want of women on the old ftage was fupplied . If they had not a young man who could perform the part with a face that might pafs for feminine , the character was acted in a mask , which was at that time a part ...
Página 29
Compare this with a paffage in Chaucer's Frankeleines Tale , late edit . v . i . 11179 , & c . " In idel , as men fain , ye nothing make , " But , lord , thife grifly fendly rockes blake , & c . & c . ” And Mr. Pope is more indebted to ...
Compare this with a paffage in Chaucer's Frankeleines Tale , late edit . v . i . 11179 , & c . " In idel , as men fain , ye nothing make , " But , lord , thife grifly fendly rockes blake , & c . & c . ” And Mr. Pope is more indebted to ...
Página 33
... were not fcrupuloufly nice about proper names , but almost always corrupted them . STEEVENS . 4 And never , fince the middle fummer's Spring , & c . ] There are not many paffages in Shakspeare which one can be certain he has ...
... were not fcrupuloufly nice about proper names , but almost always corrupted them . STEEVENS . 4 And never , fince the middle fummer's Spring , & c . ] There are not many paffages in Shakspeare which one can be certain he has ...
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Términos y frases comunes
ancient appears bear believe better bring called comes copies daughter death defire doth Duke editions editors Enter Exeunt Exit eyes faid fair fairy fame father fear feems fenfe fhall fhould folio fome fool fortune foul fpeak fuch fuppofe fweet gentle give hand hath head hear heart honour houfe I'll Italy JOHNSON Kate Kath keep kind king lady leave live look lord mafter MALONE marry means meet moft moon muft nature never night once Orla paffage perhaps play poet poor pray prefent Queen Rofalind SCENE Shakspeare STEEVENS tell thee thefe THEOBALD theſe thing thou thought true ufed unto WARBURTON wife young