William Shakspere: A BiographyG. Routledge and Sons, 1867 - 553 Seiten |
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Seite 35
... nature , with rural occupations , with athletic sports , which is incompatible with an inactive boyhood . It is not impossible that some natural defect , or some accidental injury , may have modified the energy of such a child ; and ...
... nature , with rural occupations , with athletic sports , which is incompatible with an inactive boyhood . It is not impossible that some natural defect , or some accidental injury , may have modified the energy of such a child ; and ...
Seite 36
... Nature , as Gray has painted him— " The dauntless child Stretch'd forth his little arms and smil'd . " The only qualifications necessary for the admission of a boy into the Free Grammar School of Stratford were , that he should be a ...
... Nature , as Gray has painted him— " The dauntless child Stretch'd forth his little arms and smil'd . " The only qualifications necessary for the admission of a boy into the Free Grammar School of Stratford were , that he should be a ...
Seite 40
... nature and the habits and friendships of his early life . But that tolerance does not presume insincerity in himself or his family . The Confession of Faith ' found in the roof of his father's house two hundred years after he was born ...
... nature and the habits and friendships of his early life . But that tolerance does not presume insincerity in himself or his family . The Confession of Faith ' found in the roof of his father's house two hundred years after he was born ...
Seite 42
... nature , as the wild blossoms and the fruit of a rich intellectual soil , uncultivated , but not sterile . Of the romances of chivalry might be read , in the fair types of Richard Pynson , Sir Bevis of Southampton ; ' and in those of ...
... nature , as the wild blossoms and the fruit of a rich intellectual soil , uncultivated , but not sterile . Of the romances of chivalry might be read , in the fair types of Richard Pynson , Sir Bevis of Southampton ; ' and in those of ...
Seite 44
... nature , of passion , his humour might have been as rich as we find it , and his wit as pointed , but that he would not have been the poet of the most profound as well as the most tolerant philosophy ; his insight into the nature of man ...
... nature , of passion , his humour might have been as rich as we find it , and his wit as pointed , but that he would not have been the poet of the most profound as well as the most tolerant philosophy ; his insight into the nature of man ...
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