The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 11Macmillan Company, 1904 |
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Page 22
... seems to have been made in each . It is futile and immoral to conceal or minimize the faults and vices of men of genius ; but it is equally futile and immoral to attempt to deter- mine in any individual career the degree of moral ...
... seems to have been made in each . It is futile and immoral to conceal or minimize the faults and vices of men of genius ; but it is equally futile and immoral to attempt to deter- mine in any individual career the degree of moral ...
Page 25
... seems to be guarded as a place sacred to the memory of the foremost man of expression who has yet appeared among the English - speaking peoples . It has become a town of some magnitude , with a pros- perous trade in malt and corn ; but ...
... seems to be guarded as a place sacred to the memory of the foremost man of expression who has yet appeared among the English - speaking peoples . It has become a town of some magnitude , with a pros- perous trade in malt and corn ; but ...
Page 29
... seems no reason to doubt that the poet was born on the 22d or 23d of the month . There were then two detached houses standing in Henley Street where the present house now stands ; tradition assigns the house to the west as the place of ...
... seems no reason to doubt that the poet was born on the 22d or 23d of the month . There were then two detached houses standing in Henley Street where the present house now stands ; tradition assigns the house to the west as the place of ...
Page 30
... seems fitted , by its very simplicity , to serve as the starting - point for so great a career . There is a small fireplace ; the low ceiling is within reach of the hand ; on the narrow panes of glass which fill the casement names and ...
... seems fitted , by its very simplicity , to serve as the starting - point for so great a career . There is a small fireplace ; the low ceiling is within reach of the hand ; on the narrow panes of glass which fill the casement names and ...
Page 31
... seem to belong to Shakespeare , since they bloom in the plays as if they first struck root in the rich soil of his imagination . This property , which remained continuously in the possession of Shakespeare's kin until the beginning of ...
... seem to belong to Shakespeare , since they bloom in the plays as if they first struck root in the rich soil of his imagination . This property , which remained continuously in the possession of Shakespeare's kin until the beginning of ...
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