The Life and Beauties of Shakespeare: Comprising Careful Selections from Each Play, with a General Index, Digesting Them Under Proper HeadsPhillips, Sampson, 1849 - 345 pages |
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Page x
... hand , it is stated by Rowe that he was " a considerable dealer in wool . " The truth of the latter report it is scarcely possible to doubt . It was received from Betterton the player , whose veneration for the poet induced him to make ...
... hand , it is stated by Rowe that he was " a considerable dealer in wool . " The truth of the latter report it is scarcely possible to doubt . It was received from Betterton the player , whose veneration for the poet induced him to make ...
Page xix
... hands they were least likely to escape with impunity in case of detection . Sir Thomas Lucy was a Puritan ; and the severity of manners which has always characterized this sect , would teach him to extend very little indulgence to the ...
... hands they were least likely to escape with impunity in case of detection . Sir Thomas Lucy was a Puritan ; and the severity of manners which has always characterized this sect , would teach him to extend very little indulgence to the ...
Page xxiii
... hand than he could hold , hired boys to wait under his inspection , who , when Will Shakspeare was summoned , were immediately to present themselves , I am Shakspeare's boy , sir . In time , Shakspeare found higher employment , but as ...
... hand than he could hold , hired boys to wait under his inspection , who , when Will Shakspeare was summoned , were immediately to present themselves , I am Shakspeare's boy , sir . In time , Shakspeare found higher employment , but as ...
Page xxvii
... hands ; they had not to invent for themselves , but to adapt an old inven- tion to their own purposes : and at a time when every better apartment was adorned with tapestry ; when even the rooms of the commonest taverns were hung with ...
... hands ; they had not to invent for themselves , but to adapt an old inven- tion to their own purposes : and at a time when every better apartment was adorned with tapestry ; when even the rooms of the commonest taverns were hung with ...
Page xxxii
... to have suffered more than any other play in passing through the ignorant and negligent hands of the transcriber and the printer , might have been originally the work of Shakspeare , without retain- xxxii . THE LIFE OF.
... to have suffered more than any other play in passing through the ignorant and negligent hands of the transcriber and the printer , might have been originally the work of Shakspeare , without retain- xxxii . THE LIFE OF.
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Agamemnon Ajax Antony art thou Banquo bear beauty Ben Jonson blood bosom breath Brutus Cassius Cesar cheek CORIOLANUS crown Cymbeline dead dear death deed Desdemona doth dream ears earth eyes fair father fear fire fool friends gentle Ghost give gods grief hand hath head hear heart heaven honour hour Iago Jonson king kiss Lady lips live look lord Lowsie Macb Macbeth Macd maid moon murder nature ne'er never night noble o'er passion Patroclus pity play poet poor prince queen Rape of Lucrece revenge Romeo Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's shame sleep smile soul speak spirit Stratford sweet tears tell theatre thee thine thing Thomas Lucy thou art thou hast thought Titus Andronicus tongue true Venus and Adonis vex'd virtue weep wife wind words wretch youth