The Plays of William Shakspeare, Volumul 2Printed and fold by J.J. Tourneisen, 1799 |
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Pagina 58
... poet must have time to grow , " And fpread and burnish , as his brothers do : " Who ftill looks lean , fure with fome p- is curft , " But no man can be Falstaff fat at firft . " ― Prologue to the tragedy of Circe . The plays which ...
... poet must have time to grow , " And fpread and burnish , as his brothers do : " Who ftill looks lean , fure with fome p- is curft , " But no man can be Falstaff fat at firft . " ― Prologue to the tragedy of Circe . The plays which ...
Pagina 64
... poet is mentioned by Meres , in his Wit's Treasury , 1598 , as an eminent comick writer , and the best platter of his time . He feems to have been introduced under the name of Don Antonio Balladino , in a comedy that has been attributed ...
... poet is mentioned by Meres , in his Wit's Treasury , 1598 , as an eminent comick writer , and the best platter of his time . He feems to have been introduced under the name of Don Antonio Balladino , in a comedy that has been attributed ...
Pagina 65
... poet to the city of Milan , fir , are you ? Ant . I fupply the place , fir , when a worfe cannot be had , fir . Did you fee the laft pageant I fet forth ? " Afterwards Antonio , speaking of the plays he had written , fays . - Let me ...
... poet to the city of Milan , fir , are you ? Ant . I fupply the place , fir , when a worfe cannot be had , fir . Did you fee the laft pageant I fet forth ? " Afterwards Antonio , speaking of the plays he had written , fays . - Let me ...
Pagina 66
... fell . " Thefe lines were inferted by Mr. Rowe in his first edition of The Life of Shakspeare , and he then fuppofed that they related to our poet , and alluded to his having withdrawn himself for fome time from 66 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER.
... fell . " Thefe lines were inferted by Mr. Rowe in his first edition of The Life of Shakspeare , and he then fuppofed that they related to our poet , and alluded to his having withdrawn himself for fome time from 66 CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER.
Pagina 67
... poet cer- tainly had no title to that epithet . Spenfer , how- ever , might have used it in an appropriated fense , learned in all the bufinefs of the flage ; and in this fenfe the epithet is more applicable to Shakspeare than to any poet ...
... poet cer- tainly had no title to that epithet . Spenfer , how- ever , might have used it in an appropriated fense , learned in all the bufinefs of the flage ; and in this fenfe the epithet is more applicable to Shakspeare than to any poet ...
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acted addreffed afcertain againſt alfo allufion almoft appears author's plays circumftance comedy Comedy of Errors compofed compofition copy criticks Cymbeline death dramatick edition Engliſh faid fame fays fcene fecond feems fhall fhould fince firft firſt folio fome fpeare ftage fubject fuch fufficient fuppofed Gentlemen of Verona Hamlet hath Henry IV Hiftory himſelf inferted John Johnſon Jonfon Julius Cæfar King Henry King Henry VI King Lear laft Latin learned likewife lines Lond Love's Labour's Loft Lover's Melancholy Macbeth Mafter MALONE Meafure moft moſt mufe muft muſt obferved occafion old play paffage pamphlet perfons piece Plautus Plutarch poem poet prefent printed probably publick publiſhed quarto Queen reafon reprefented Richard Romeo and Juliet Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shrew Spenfer Stationers STEEVENS Theatre Royal thefe theſe thofe Thomas thoſe thou Timon of Athens tragedy tranflated Twelfth Night verfes whofe William Shakspeare writer written