The Plays of William Shakespeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, Volumen1C. Bathurst, 1773 |
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... occafion to be comick , but in comedy he seems to repose , or to luxuriate , as in a mode of thinking congenial to his nature . In his tragick scenes there is always something wanting , but his comedy often furpasses expectation or ...
... occafion to be comick , but in comedy he seems to repose , or to luxuriate , as in a mode of thinking congenial to his nature . In his tragick scenes there is always something wanting , but his comedy often furpasses expectation or ...
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... occafion demanded , to shew how much his stores of knowledge could fup- ply , he feldom escapes without the pity or refentment of his reader . It is incident to him to be now - and - then entangled with an unwieldy fentiment , which he ...
... occafion demanded , to shew how much his stores of knowledge could fup- ply , he feldom escapes without the pity or refentment of his reader . It is incident to him to be now - and - then entangled with an unwieldy fentiment , which he ...
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... occafion . There are a few passages which may pass for imi- tations , but so few , that the exception only confirms the rule ; he obtained them from accidental quota- tions , or by oral communication , and as he used what he had , would ...
... occafion . There are a few passages which may pass for imi- tations , but so few , that the exception only confirms the rule ; he obtained them from accidental quota- tions , or by oral communication , and as he used what he had , would ...
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... occafion is presented to him : no man can fay , he " ever had a fit subject for his wit , and did not then " raise himself as high above the rest of poets , - Quantum lenta folent inter viburna cuprefssi . ” It is to be lamented , that ...
... occafion is presented to him : no man can fay , he " ever had a fit subject for his wit , and did not then " raise himself as high above the rest of poets , - Quantum lenta folent inter viburna cuprefssi . ” It is to be lamented , that ...
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... occafion that any just writer could take , to form the judgment and taste of our nation . For of all English poets Shake- speare must be confessed to be the fairest and fullest subject for criticism , and to afford the most numerous ...
... occafion that any just writer could take , to form the judgment and taste of our nation . For of all English poets Shake- speare must be confessed to be the fairest and fullest subject for criticism , and to afford the most numerous ...
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The Plays of William Shakespeare ...: With the Corrections and ..., Volumen1 William Shakespeare Vista de fragmentos - 1809 |
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