The Plays of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volume 1J. Johnson, 1803 |
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Page 12
... fatire on the vanity and affectation of the actors of his age , he fubjoins- 7 as he hath hit His face ; It should seem from these words , that the plate prefixed to the folio 1623 exhibited such a likeness of Shakfpeare as fatisfied ...
... fatire on the vanity and affectation of the actors of his age , he fubjoins- 7 as he hath hit His face ; It should seem from these words , that the plate prefixed to the folio 1623 exhibited such a likeness of Shakfpeare as fatisfied ...
Page 79
... fatire is said to have. So , in Camden's Remains , 1614 : " Here lyes ten in the hundred , " In the ground fast ramm'd ; " ' Tis an hundred to ten " But his foule is damn'd . " MALONE . STEEVENS . * Oh ! ho ! quoth the devil , ' tis my ...
... fatire is said to have. So , in Camden's Remains , 1614 : " Here lyes ten in the hundred , " In the ground fast ramm'd ; " ' Tis an hundred to ten " But his foule is damn'd . " MALONE . STEEVENS . * Oh ! ho ! quoth the devil , ' tis my ...
Page 80
... fatire is said to have stung the man so severely , that he never forgave it . " Combe's will , that his brother Thomas was dead in 1614. John devised the greater part of his real and personal estate to his nephew Thomas Combe , with ...
... fatire is said to have stung the man so severely , that he never forgave it . " Combe's will , that his brother Thomas was dead in 1614. John devised the greater part of his real and personal estate to his nephew Thomas Combe , with ...
Page 81
... fatire ; and we cannot wonder that anonymous lampoons should have been affixed to the marble designed to convey the clharacter of such a being to pofterity . I hope I may be excused for this attempt to vindicate Shakspeare from the ...
... fatire ; and we cannot wonder that anonymous lampoons should have been affixed to the marble designed to convey the clharacter of such a being to pofterity . I hope I may be excused for this attempt to vindicate Shakspeare from the ...
Page 108
... fatire of the present age has taken the liberty to do , yet there is a pleasing and a well - diftinguished variety in those characters which he thought fit to meddle with . Falstaff is allowed by every body to be a mafier- piece ; the ...
... fatire of the present age has taken the liberty to do , yet there is a pleasing and a well - diftinguished variety in those characters which he thought fit to meddle with . Falstaff is allowed by every body to be a mafier- piece ; the ...
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