Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth: Delivered at the Surrey InstitutionJ. Warren, 1821 - 356 Seiten |
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Seite 9
... our knowledge little or none . We now and then repeat the names of some of the old writers by rote ; but we are shy of looking into their works . Though we seem disposed to think highly of them , and to GENERAL VIEW OF THE SUBJECT . 9.
... our knowledge little or none . We now and then repeat the names of some of the old writers by rote ; but we are shy of looking into their works . Though we seem disposed to think highly of them , and to GENERAL VIEW OF THE SUBJECT . 9.
Seite 10
Delivered at the Surrey Institution William Hazlitt. seem disposed to think highly of them , and to give them every credit for a masculine and ori- ginal vein of thought , as a matter of literary courtesy and enlargement of taste , we ...
Delivered at the Surrey Institution William Hazlitt. seem disposed to think highly of them , and to give them every credit for a masculine and ori- ginal vein of thought , as a matter of literary courtesy and enlargement of taste , we ...
Seite 27
... seems to have had the same feeling in his mind in the production of his Faery Queen , and vindicates his poetic fiction on this very ground of analogy . " Right well I wote , most mighty sovereign , That all this famous antique history ...
... seems to have had the same feeling in his mind in the production of his Faery Queen , and vindicates his poetic fiction on this very ground of analogy . " Right well I wote , most mighty sovereign , That all this famous antique history ...
Seite 38
... seem to be approaching the RICH STROND described in Spenser , where treasures of all kinds lay scattered , or rather crowded together on the shore in inexhaustible but unregarded profu- sion , " rich as the oozy bottom of the deep in ...
... seem to be approaching the RICH STROND described in Spenser , where treasures of all kinds lay scattered , or rather crowded together on the shore in inexhaustible but unregarded profu- sion , " rich as the oozy bottom of the deep in ...
Seite 43
... ! How oft in arms on horse to bend the mace , How oft in arms on foot to break the sword , Which never now these eyes may see again ! " There seems a reference to Chaucer in the wording of HEYWOOD , MIDDLETON , & c . 43.
... ! How oft in arms on horse to bend the mace , How oft in arms on foot to break the sword , Which never now these eyes may see again ! " There seems a reference to Chaucer in the wording of HEYWOOD , MIDDLETON , & c . 43.
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