The Plays of William Shakespeare: In Twenty-one Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volúmenes1-2J. Nichols and Son, 1813 |
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Página 19
... produced , affords no evidence that any one of our early limners had condescended to borrow the general outline and dis- position of his portraits from the tasteless heads pre- fixed to volumes issued out by booksellers . The art ist ...
... produced , affords no evidence that any one of our early limners had condescended to borrow the general outline and dis- position of his portraits from the tasteless heads pre- fixed to volumes issued out by booksellers . The art ist ...
Página 25
... produced . The former of these eye will often detect the want of them , when the most exact mechanical process cannot decide on the places in which they are omitted . - Vertue , in short , though a laborious , was a very in- different ...
... produced . The former of these eye will often detect the want of them , when the most exact mechanical process cannot decide on the places in which they are omitted . - Vertue , in short , though a laborious , was a very in- different ...
Página 27
... produced for sale ( as in the present instance ) by alien hands , almost a century after the death of the person supposed to be represented ; and then , ( as Edmund says in King Lear ) " come pat , like the catastrophe of the old comedy ...
... produced for sale ( as in the present instance ) by alien hands , almost a century after the death of the person supposed to be represented ; and then , ( as Edmund says in King Lear ) " come pat , like the catastrophe of the old comedy ...
Página 30
... produced by the most skilful of our modern artists ; but it is idle to be at the charge of perpe- tuating illusions : and who shall offer to point out , among the numerous prints of Shakspeare , any one that is more like him than the ...
... produced by the most skilful of our modern artists ; but it is idle to be at the charge of perpe- tuating illusions : and who shall offer to point out , among the numerous prints of Shakspeare , any one that is more like him than the ...
Página 33
... produced only to have been persecuted . - May it be subjoined , that the freedom with which the same gentleman has treated the notes of others , seems to have author- ized an equal degree of licence respecting his own ? And yet , though ...
... produced only to have been persecuted . - May it be subjoined , that the freedom with which the same gentleman has treated the notes of others , seems to have author- ized an equal degree of licence respecting his own ? And yet , though ...
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Otras ediciones - Ver todas
The Plays of William Shakespeare ...: With the Corrections and Illustrations ... William Shakespeare,Joseph Dennie,Samuel Johnson Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
ancient appears baptized Ben Jonson bequeath better buried censure character Clopton Combe comedy conjecture copies corrupted criticism daughter death died dramatick edition editor Edward Nash Elizabeth English engraved executors genius Gent gentleman George Hart give Hall Hamlet hath heirs honour Hugh Clopton John Barnard John Shakspere Jonson judgment Judith King Henry labour language learning lived London MALONE married monument nature never New-Place obscure observed original passages perhaps picture players plays poet poet's Pope portrait pounds preface printed probably publick quarto reader Register Richard Romeo and Juliet Rowe Sadler says scenes second folio Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sir John Barnard stage STEEVENS Stratford Stratford-upon-Avon suppose Susanna Susanna Hall theatre Theobald thing Thomas Nash Thomas Quiney thought tion Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida unto verses Warwickshire Welcombe wife William Shakespeare William Shakspeare words writings written