Eighteenth Century Essays on ShakespeareDavid Nichol Smith J. MacLehose and Sons, 1903 - 358 páginas |
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Página xxviii
... truth in the criticism that he gave Shakespeare not as he was , but as he ought to be , though Pope might well have retorted that in his opinion the two conditions were identical . Whatever did not conform to his opinion of ...
... truth in the criticism that he gave Shakespeare not as he was , but as he ought to be , though Pope might well have retorted that in his opinion the two conditions were identical . Whatever did not conform to his opinion of ...
Página xxxiii
... to show that his attitude to the characters themselves was other than Warton's . 1 See the Dedication of the Revisal of Shakespeare's Text . с No critic had questioned Shakespeare's truth to nature . The INTRODUCTION xxxiii.
... to show that his attitude to the characters themselves was other than Warton's . 1 See the Dedication of the Revisal of Shakespeare's Text . с No critic had questioned Shakespeare's truth to nature . The INTRODUCTION xxxiii.
Página xxxiv
... truth and equal force . If human nature were destroyed , and no monument were left of it except his works , other beings might know what man was from those writings . " The same eulogy is repeated in other words by Johnson . And in ...
... truth and equal force . If human nature were destroyed , and no monument were left of it except his works , other beings might know what man was from those writings . " The same eulogy is repeated in other words by Johnson . And in ...
Página xxxv
... truth to nature . His classical bias , excusable in a Professor of Latin , is best seen in his essay " On the Faults of Shakespeare , " of which the title was alone sufficient to win him the contempt of later critics . His essays are ...
... truth to nature . His classical bias , excusable in a Professor of Latin , is best seen in his essay " On the Faults of Shakespeare , " of which the title was alone sufficient to win him the contempt of later critics . His essays are ...
Página xlix
... ) P. xxv , That nice Critick , to Truth and Nature , p . xxvii . ( 4 ) P. xxx , For I shall find , to this long agitated Question , p . xxxii . ( p . 76 ) . d Theobald quotes also from his own correspondence . On 17th INTRODUCTION xlix.
... ) P. xxv , That nice Critick , to Truth and Nature , p . xxvii . ( 4 ) P. xxx , For I shall find , to this long agitated Question , p . xxxii . ( p . 76 ) . d Theobald quotes also from his own correspondence . On 17th INTRODUCTION xlix.
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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