The Works of Shakespeare, 1±ÇPrinted at the Clarendon Press, 1770 |
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xii ÆäÀÌÁö
... reasons , they must be charg'd upon the poet himself , and there is no help for it . But , I think , the two disadvantages which I have mention'd ( to be obliged to please the lowest of people , and to keep the worst of company ) if the ...
... reasons , they must be charg'd upon the poet himself , and there is no help for it . But , I think , the two disadvantages which I have mention'd ( to be obliged to please the lowest of people , and to keep the worst of company ) if the ...
xiv ÆäÀÌÁö
... reason to be afraid of admiration . They are the Scylla and Charybdis of authors ; those who escape one often fall by the other . Peffimum genus inimicorum laudantes , says Tacitus : and Virgil defires to wear a charm against those who ...
... reason to be afraid of admiration . They are the Scylla and Charybdis of authors ; those who escape one often fall by the other . Peffimum genus inimicorum laudantes , says Tacitus : and Virgil defires to wear a charm against those who ...
xvii ÆäÀÌÁö
... reason , than their willingness to shorten fome scenes : these men ( as it was faid of Procrufstes ) either lopping , or stretching an author , to make him just fit for their stage . 1 THIS edition is said to be printed from the ...
... reason , than their willingness to shorten fome scenes : these men ( as it was faid of Procrufstes ) either lopping , or stretching an author , to make him just fit for their stage . 1 THIS edition is said to be printed from the ...
xix ÆäÀÌÁö
... reason , than that a governing player , to have the mouthing of fome favourite speech himself , would snatch it from the unworthy lips of an underling . PROSE from verse they did not know , and they accordingly printed one for the other ...
... reason , than that a governing player , to have the mouthing of fome favourite speech himself , would snatch it from the unworthy lips of an underling . PROSE from verse they did not know , and they accordingly printed one for the other ...
xxii ÆäÀÌÁö
... reason , how fond do we fee some people of discovering any little personal story of the great men of antiquity ! their families , the common accidents of their lives , and even their shape , make , and features , have been the subject ...
... reason , how fond do we fee some people of discovering any little personal story of the great men of antiquity ! their families , the common accidents of their lives , and even their shape , make , and features , have been the subject ...
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