The First Sitting of the Committee on the Proposed Monument to ShakespeareG.A. Williams, 1823 - 88 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 4 din 4
Pagina 13
... I have lately compared several of his tragedies with mine , and am of opinion , that , could the Athenian ladies have witnessed some of his scenes , they would have been seized by as I violent hysterics as at my Eumenides . I would 13.
... I have lately compared several of his tragedies with mine , and am of opinion , that , could the Athenian ladies have witnessed some of his scenes , they would have been seized by as I violent hysterics as at my Eumenides . I would 13.
Pagina 18
... Athenian audience with such in- fantine vagaries , we should have been pelted with rotten figs and olives in the theatre of Bacchus . As for his chorusses - Demeter ! a fig's end for ' em ! With the exception of a few fine passages ...
... Athenian audience with such in- fantine vagaries , we should have been pelted with rotten figs and olives in the theatre of Bacchus . As for his chorusses - Demeter ! a fig's end for ' em ! With the exception of a few fine passages ...
Pagina 82
... Athenian Club . It is gratifying , Gentlemen , to observe that , in an age like the present , so distinguished for philanthropy and charitable subscriptions , we do not overlook the illustrious dead , who have been the ornaments of our ...
... Athenian Club . It is gratifying , Gentlemen , to observe that , in an age like the present , so distinguished for philanthropy and charitable subscriptions , we do not overlook the illustrious dead , who have been the ornaments of our ...
Pagina
... First Midshipman of his Majesty's 76 78 2888 69 80 ship the Ariel Eugene Goodenough , a travelled Warwickshire Squire , and Member of the Athenian Club The Chairman 82 " 88 BRITISH USEUM MUSEUM Transferred 1889 DUPLICATE.
... First Midshipman of his Majesty's 76 78 2888 69 80 ship the Ariel Eugene Goodenough , a travelled Warwickshire Squire , and Member of the Athenian Club The Chairman 82 " 88 BRITISH USEUM MUSEUM Transferred 1889 DUPLICATE.
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The First Sitting of the Committee on the Proposed Monument to Shakespeare Charles Kelsall Vizualizare completă - 1823 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
actors admiration adopted appears Arden asphodel Athenian Avon birth-place Brettanians Britanni British bump cerning CHAIRMAN character Cibber comedy comic comique Committee dæmon diamond grottoes dramas earth Edinbro Elysian fields England erect EURIPIDES fait Feversham FLAGEL GARRICK génie genius Gentlemen Globe Theatre gloire grand grazier Greek Hecuba hint hish honors human heart idea int'rest kape koax lately letters LOPE DE VEGA Macbeth marble MARMADUKE STURTON mérite Messieurs mind monument to Shakspeare monument worthy MUSEUM Transferred 1889 Negus noble occasion OGEE Othello plain plase PLAUTUS plutôt poet poet's poëte poetic poorsh proposed building PROPOSED MONUMENT qu'il Qu'on qu'un quelques reashon Saksper satire scenes sculptor SHADE OF LOPE Shak Shakspeare Cake Shakspeare's Shaksperiense shew shubscribe skull Sophocles speare statue Stratford STRATFORD-UPON-AVON struck sure talents tantôt il m'a Tewkesbury thirty-eight thou tion Transferred 1889 DUPLICATE trouble Vanishes veluti visit in London vote votre Shakspeare
Pasaje populare
Pagina 27 - WHAT needs my Shakespeare for his honoured bones The labour of an age in piled stones ? Or that his hallowed reliques should be hid Under a star-ypointing pyramid ? Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need'st thou such weak witness of thy name ? Thou in our wonder and astonishment Hast built thyself a livelong monument.
Pagina 28 - For whilst to th' shame of slow-endeavouring art, Thy easy numbers flow, and that each heart Hath from the leaves of thy unvalued book Those Delphic lines with deep impression took; Then thou, our fancy of itself bereaving, Dost make us marble with too much conceiving; And so sepulchered in such pomp dost lie, That kings for such a tomb would wish to die.
Pagina 27 - WHAT needs my Shakespeare, for his honour'd bones, The labour of an age in piled stones? Or that his hallow'd relics should be hid Under a star-ypointing pyramid? Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need'st thou such weak witness of thy name? Thou, in our wonder and astonishment, Hast built thyself a livelong monument.
Pagina 83 - Nescio qua natale solum dulcedine cunctos ducit et immemores non sinit esse sui.
Pagina 56 - Cattegat leave me but little insure for the cultivation of the fine arts. Allow me however to suggest, that if you propose to adopt a statue to commemorate your immortal poet, few artists will be better capable of doing it justice than my distinguished countryman, justly surnamed, at Copenhagen, the Phidias of the North. The scene of one of the most striking of Shakspeare's dramas lies, you are aware, in Denmark ; and is not a full quarter of the British blood Danish ? As for the other candidate...
Pagina 75 - Ihe dog-days, the fat knight's greasy flesh might melt a little, though whether on paper, on the stage, or in •wax, he will never be found, I guess, to inspire his visitors with the
Pagina 20 - I was walking by the crystal fountains, arm in arm with Menander. One of the advantages I have over him (and I have frequently compared, in the Elysian avenues, his comic productions with my own), was the wider field afforded at Athens for comedy, by the absurd passions attributed by my countrymen to their deities; of which I have not failed to profit in my Birds, my Frogs, and my Plutus. We both agreed that his powers must have been extraordinary, and that had he flourished our cotemporary in Hellas,...
Pagina 49 - Itay, to kape the moniment so clane, that the smock of the hansomst and richest bride in all Stratford, in her way to church, shall be sut to it, your honors ; beside, my house is almost ruinated, and the walls so writ over with names, that gemmen have no more room to write their's, your honors. 'Sense me for loving the character of our dair Will better than my own int'rest, and my fam'ly int'rest, and the int'rest of...
Pagina 21 - J have not failed to profit in my Birds, my Frogs, and my Plutus. We both agreed that his powers must have been extraordinary, and that had he flourished our contemporary in Hellas, we should have been cruelly jealous of them. You have Menander's (he charged me to tell you) and my votes for a monument worthy of his merits. (Vanishes.) SHADE OF PLAUTUS appears. — Though your poet's comic powers may equal mine, Britanni! I would have you bear in mind (neither will you be able to convict me of errors...
Pagina 50 - WOOLRICH TUPPER YEO, a South-Down Grazier. Though I can read in your eyes, Gentlemen, before I begin to address you, that a grazier must be a sort of fish out of water in a Committee of this description, your goodness, I am sure, will pardon me, for having come post-haste from my farm at Harting, to suggest a plan for the monument of our great Shakspeare. You must know that, when a young man, I had no relish for the profession of a grazier ; but happening to turn one day over the pages of our poet...