The Plays of William Shakespeare, Band 1T. Bensley, 1803 |
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Seite ii
... never having read them . Whether his ignorance of the ancients were a disadvantage to him or no , may admit of a dispute : for though the knowledge of them might have made him more correct , yet it is not improbable but that the ...
... never having read them . Whether his ignorance of the ancients were a disadvantage to him or no , may admit of a dispute : for though the knowledge of them might have made him more correct , yet it is not improbable but that the ...
Seite iv
... never meet with any further account of him this way , than that the top of his performance was the Ghost in his own Hamlet . I should have been much more pleased , to have learned from certain authority which was the first play he wrote ...
... never meet with any further account of him this way , than that the top of his performance was the Ghost in his own Hamlet . I should have been much more pleased , to have learned from certain authority which was the first play he wrote ...
Seite ix
... never forgave it . He died in the fifty - third year of his age , and was buried on the north side of the chancel , in the great church at Stratford , where a monument is placed in the wall . On his grave - stone underneath is , " Good ...
... never forgave it . He died in the fifty - third year of his age , and was buried on the north side of the chancel , in the great church at Stratford , where a monument is placed in the wall . On his grave - stone underneath is , " Good ...
Seite x
... never blotted out a " line . My answer hath been , Would he had blotted " a thousand ! which they thought a malevolent " speech . I had not told posterity this , but for " their ignorance , who chose that circumstance to " commend their ...
... never blotted out a " line . My answer hath been , Would he had blotted " a thousand ! which they thought a malevolent " speech . I had not told posterity this , but for " their ignorance , who chose that circumstance to " commend their ...
Seite xi
... never wrong , but with just cause . " and such like , which were ridiculous . But he " redeemed his vices with his virtues : there was " ever more in him to be praised than to be par- " doned . " As for the passage which he mentions out ...
... never wrong , but with just cause . " and such like , which were ridiculous . But he " redeemed his vices with his virtues : there was " ever more in him to be praised than to be par- " doned . " As for the passage which he mentions out ...
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