Eighteenth Century Essays on Shakespeare |
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Página 7
And he the Man whom Nature ' s self had made To mock her self , and Truth to
imitate With friendly Counter under mimick Shade , Our pleasant Willy , ah ! is
dead of late : With whom all Joy and jolly Merriment Is also deaded , and in
Dolour ...
And he the Man whom Nature ' s self had made To mock her self , and Truth to
imitate With friendly Counter under mimick Shade , Our pleasant Willy , ah ! is
dead of late : With whom all Joy and jolly Merriment Is also deaded , and in
Dolour ...
Página 24
... those Beauties were entirely his own , and owing to the Force of his own
Nature ; whereas his Faults were owing to his Education , and to the Age that he
liv ' d in . One may say of him as they did of Homer , that he had none to imitate ,
and is ...
... those Beauties were entirely his own , and owing to the Force of his own
Nature ; whereas his Faults were owing to his Education , and to the Age that he
liv ' d in . One may say of him as they did of Homer , that he had none to imitate ,
and is ...
Página 38
For there is , say they , among Shakespear ' s Plays , one callid The Comedy of
Errors , which is undeniably an Imitation of the Menechmi of Plautus . Now
Shakespear , say they , being conversant with Plautus , it undeniably follows that
he ...
For there is , say they , among Shakespear ' s Plays , one callid The Comedy of
Errors , which is undeniably an Imitation of the Menechmi of Plautus . Now
Shakespear , say they , being conversant with Plautus , it undeniably follows that
he ...
Página 39
I remember to have seen , among the Translations of Ovid ' s Epistles printed by
Mr . Tonson , an Imitation of that from Enone to Paris , which Mr . Dryden tells us
in his Preface to those Epistles was imitated by one of the Fair Sex who ...
I remember to have seen , among the Translations of Ovid ' s Epistles printed by
Mr . Tonson , an Imitation of that from Enone to Paris , which Mr . Dryden tells us
in his Preface to those Epistles was imitated by one of the Fair Sex who ...
Página 40
... would he make no Imitation , no Commendation , not the least Mention of the
unparallell ' d and inimitable Grief of the Hecuba of Euripides ? How comes it that
we find no Imitation of any ancient Play in Him but the Menechmi of Plautus ?
... would he make no Imitation , no Commendation , not the least Mention of the
unparallell ' d and inimitable Grief of the Hecuba of Euripides ? How comes it that
we find no Imitation of any ancient Play in Him but the Menechmi of Plautus ?
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Términos y frases comunes
acquainted action admirable Ancients appears Author Beauties believe called character comedy common considered copies correct Courage criticism edition editor English equal Errors Essay evidence excellence expressed fact Falstaff Farmer force Genius give given hand hath Henry History honour humour Imitation John Johnson judgment kind knowledge known labour language Latin learning least less letter manners matter mean mind nature never obscure observation occasion opinion original particular pass passage perhaps persons piece Plautus plays Poems Poet Pope Pope's Preface present Prince printed probably produced publick published qualities question reader reason reference Remarks respect rules says scene seems Shakespeare shew sometimes stage supposed taken Theobald thing thought Tragedy translation true truth Warburton whole write written