“The” Plays Of William Shakespeare, Band 1T. Bensley, 1778 |
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Seite 3
... pleasure is obtained ; yet , thus unaffifted by intereft or paffion , they have past through variations of tafte and changes of manners , and , as they devolved from one generation to another , have received new honours at every tranf ...
... pleasure is obtained ; yet , thus unaffifted by intereft or paffion , they have past through variations of tafte and changes of manners , and , as they devolved from one generation to another , have received new honours at every tranf ...
Seite 4
... pleasures of fudden wonder are foon exhaufted , and the mind can only repofe on the stability of truth . Shakespeare is above all writers , at least above all modern writers , the poet of nature ; the post that holds up to his readers a ...
... pleasures of fudden wonder are foon exhaufted , and the mind can only repofe on the stability of truth . Shakespeare is above all writers , at least above all modern writers , the poet of nature ; the post that holds up to his readers a ...
Seite 11
... pleasure confifts in variety . The players , who in their edition divided our au- thor's works into comedies , hiftories , and tragedies , seem not to have diftinguished the three kinds , by any very exact or definite ideas . An action ...
... pleasure confifts in variety . The players , who in their edition divided our au- thor's works into comedies , hiftories , and tragedies , seem not to have diftinguished the three kinds , by any very exact or definite ideas . An action ...
Seite 13
... pleasures and vexations are communicable to all times and to all places ; they are natural , and therefore durable ; the adventitious peculiarities of perfonal habits , are only fuperficial dies , bright and pleafing for a little while ...
... pleasures and vexations are communicable to all times and to all places ; they are natural , and therefore durable ; the adventitious peculiarities of perfonal habits , are only fuperficial dies , bright and pleafing for a little while ...
Seite 20
... from the time of Corneille , they have very generally received , by discovering that they have given more trouble to the poet , than pleasure to the auditor . The The neceffity of obferving the unities of time and place 20 PREFACE .
... from the time of Corneille , they have very generally received , by discovering that they have given more trouble to the poet , than pleasure to the auditor . The The neceffity of obferving the unities of time and place 20 PREFACE .
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againſt Ariel becauſe Caius Caliban comedy Cymbeline defire doth Duke edition Enter Exeunt expreffion faid fame fatire feems fenfe fervant feven fhall fhew fhould fignifies fince firft firſt fome fometimes Ford fpeak fpirit ftand ftill fubject fuch fuppofe fure fweet hath Henry Henry IV himſelf Hoft humour John JOHNSON Jonfon king laft Laun lefs loft lord Macbeth mafter miftrefs Mira miſtreſs moft moſt muft muſt myſelf night obferves occafion Othello paffage paffion perfon play pleaſe pleaſure poet prefent Prince of Tyre printed Profpero Protheus publiſhed quarto Quic reafon reft Romeo and Juliet ſcene Shakeſpeare Shal ſhall Silvia Slen ſpeak Speed STEEVENS thee thefe Theobald theſe thofe thoſe thou Thurio Titus Andronicus tragedy tranflated Twelfth Night uſed Valentine WARBURTON whofe WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE word