The Plays of William Shakespeare, Band 1A. Leathley, 1766 |
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Seite xxv
... unto brightness . Shakespeare opens a mine which contains gold and diamonds in unexhaustible plenty , though clouded by incrustations , debased by impurities , and mingled with a mass of meaner minerals . It has been much disputed ...
... unto brightness . Shakespeare opens a mine which contains gold and diamonds in unexhaustible plenty , though clouded by incrustations , debased by impurities , and mingled with a mass of meaner minerals . It has been much disputed ...
Seite lv
... unto their parent . There is a great dif- ference , whether any Book choose Patrones , or finde them : This hath done both . For , so much were your L. L. likings of the severall parts , when they were acted , as before they were ...
... unto their parent . There is a great dif- ference , whether any Book choose Patrones , or finde them : This hath done both . For , so much were your L. L. likings of the severall parts , when they were acted , as before they were ...
Seite cx
... unto me . Mr. Theobald was naturally turned to Industry and Labour . What he read he could transcribe : but , as what he thought , if ever he did think , he could but ill express , fo he read on ; and , by that means got a Character of ...
... unto me . Mr. Theobald was naturally turned to Industry and Labour . What he read he could transcribe : but , as what he thought , if ever he did think , he could but ill express , fo he read on ; and , by that means got a Character of ...
Seite cxx
... their Tongue to a Degree of Purity and Stability which no living Lan- guage ever attained unto before . It is with Pleasure I obferve , observe , that these Things now begin to be understood cxx Dr. WARBURTON'S PREFACE .
... their Tongue to a Degree of Purity and Stability which no living Lan- guage ever attained unto before . It is with Pleasure I obferve , observe , that these Things now begin to be understood cxx Dr. WARBURTON'S PREFACE .
Seite cxliii
... unto us , by virtue of our Offices from the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty , and her Highness's most noble and victorious Progenitors : Wherefore being folicited , by credible Report in- formed , that John Shakespeare , now of Stratford ...
... unto us , by virtue of our Offices from the Queen's Most Excellent Majesty , and her Highness's most noble and victorious Progenitors : Wherefore being folicited , by credible Report in- formed , that John Shakespeare , now of Stratford ...
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