The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 11Macmillan and Company, limited, 1903 |
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Page 64
... entirely legendary . It rests entirely on tradition ; but the tradition was persistent during many decades , and finds some support in the fact that Justice Shallow is beyond doubt a humorous study of the Sir Thomas Lucy of prosecuting ...
... entirely legendary . It rests entirely on tradition ; but the tradition was persistent during many decades , and finds some support in the fact that Justice Shallow is beyond doubt a humorous study of the Sir Thomas Lucy of prosecuting ...
Page 68
... entirely on the assump- tion that , while his family remained in Stratford , for twelve years he was almost continuously absent in London , and that he seems to speak with deep feel- ing about the disastrous effects of too great ...
... entirely on the assump- tion that , while his family remained in Stratford , for twelve years he was almost continuously absent in London , and that he seems to speak with deep feel- ing about the disastrous effects of too great ...
Page 74
... entirely unpaved . Their condition had become so noisome and danger- ous fifty years earlier that Henry VIII . began the work of paving the principal thoroughfares . Round stones were used for this purpose , and were put in position as ...
... entirely unpaved . Their condition had become so noisome and danger- ous fifty years earlier that Henry VIII . began the work of paving the principal thoroughfares . Round stones were used for this purpose , and were put in position as ...
Page 134
... tradition has secured complete possession of the stage , a new and vital drama has been impossible ; whenever it has been entirely discarded , unregulated individualism has degenerated into all manner of 134 William Shakespeare.
... tradition has secured complete possession of the stage , a new and vital drama has been impossible ; whenever it has been entirely discarded , unregulated individualism has degenerated into all manner of 134 William Shakespeare.
Page 173
... entirely express the nature of Shakespeare that they must be accepted as , in a true sense , autobiographic . Those who regard the Sonnets as pure and deliber- ate autobiography , containing a definite confession to be literally ...
... entirely express the nature of Shakespeare that they must be accepted as , in a true sense , autobiographic . Those who regard the Sonnets as pure and deliber- ate autobiography , containing a definite confession to be literally ...
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