Eighteenth Century Essays on ShakespeareDavid Nichol Smith J. MacLehose and Sons, 1903 - 358 páginas |
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Página xxii
... acquaintance with Latin authors was such as he might have gained at school he could remember tags of Horace or Mantuan , but was unable to read Plautus in the original . The plea that comparative ignorance of the classics may not have ...
... acquaintance with Latin authors was such as he might have gained at school he could remember tags of Horace or Mantuan , but was unable to read Plautus in the original . The plea that comparative ignorance of the classics may not have ...
Página xxiii
... acquaintance among them , without that knowledge of the best models , the Ancients , to inspire him with an emula- tion of them . ' During the fifty years between Pope's Preface and Johnson's , the controversy continued intermittently ...
... acquaintance among them , without that knowledge of the best models , the Ancients , to inspire him with an emula- tion of them . ' During the fifty years between Pope's Preface and Johnson's , the controversy continued intermittently ...
Página xxiv
... acquaintance with the Ancients . " He had said that Timon of Athens and Troilus and Cressida left it without dispute or exception that Shakespeare was no in- considerable master of the Greek story ; he dared be positive that the latter ...
... acquaintance with the Ancients . " He had said that Timon of Athens and Troilus and Cressida left it without dispute or exception that Shakespeare was no in- considerable master of the Greek story ; he dared be positive that the latter ...
Página xxxiii
... acquaintance , appear to him to be creatures of the imagination who live in a different world from his own . Warton describes the picture : he criticises the portraits of the characters rather than the characters . themselves . The ...
... acquaintance , appear to him to be creatures of the imagination who live in a different world from his own . Warton describes the picture : he criticises the portraits of the characters rather than the characters . themselves . The ...
Página lii
... that year , as we learn from a letter of 30th December to Zachary Grey , the editor of Hudibras : “ I must now acquaint you that the books are gone out of my hands , and lodged with the University of Oxford lii INTRODUCTION.
... that year , as we learn from a letter of 30th December to Zachary Grey , the editor of Hudibras : “ I must now acquaint you that the books are gone out of my hands , and lodged with the University of Oxford lii INTRODUCTION.
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Términos y frases comunes
acquainted admirable Ancients appears Author Beauties Ben Johnson Cæsar censure character Comedy Comedy of Errors conjecture copies Coriolanus correct Courage Cowardice criticism Double Falshood drama Dryden Dunciad edition of Shakespeare Editor English Errors Essay Farmer faults Folio Genius give Hamlet hath Henry honour humour Imitation Johnson judgment Julius Caesar Justice kind knowledge labour language Latin learning letter Love's Labour's Lost manner MAURICE MORGANN nature never obscure observation occasion omitted opinion original Ovid passage passion perhaps piece Plautus Players plays Plutarch Poems Poet Poetry Pope Pope's edition Preface Prince printed publick published reader reason Remarks Roman Rowe's Rymer says scenes seems shew shewn Sir John Falstaff Sir Thomas Hanmer Stage Stratford supposed taste Text Theobald thing thought thro tion Tragedy translation Troilus and Cressida truth verse Warburton whole William Shakespeare words write written Zachary Grey