The Plays of William Shakspeare, Volume 1 |
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Page xxi
The same advantage may be gained by opportunities of appropriating to
ourselves what was originally said by another person , and in another place .
Though our adoptions have been slightly mentioned already , our fourth
impression of the ...
The same advantage may be gained by opportunities of appropriating to
ourselves what was originally said by another person , and in another place .
Though our adoptions have been slightly mentioned already , our fourth
impression of the ...
Page 4
His wife was the daughter of one Hathaway , ' said to have been a substantial 4 -
into that way of living which his father proposed to him ; ) I believe , that on
leaving school , Shakspeare was placed in the office of some country attorney , or
the ...
His wife was the daughter of one Hathaway , ' said to have been a substantial 4 -
into that way of living which his father proposed to him ; ) I believe , that on
leaving school , Shakspeare was placed in the office of some country attorney , or
the ...
Page 5
And though this , probably the first essay of his poetry , be loft , yet it is said to
have been so very bitter , that it redoubled The following is the infcription on her
tomb - ftone in the church of Stratford : “ Here lyeth interred the body of Anne ,
wife of ...
And though this , probably the first essay of his poetry , be loft , yet it is said to
have been so very bitter , that it redoubled The following is the infcription on her
tomb - ftone in the church of Stratford : “ Here lyeth interred the body of Anne ,
wife of ...
Page 6
In a note on the tranfcript with which Mr. Capell was furnished , it is said , that "
the people of those parts pronounce low se like Lucy . ” They do so at this day in
Scotland . Mr. Wilkes , grandson of the gentleman to whom Mr. Jones repeated
the ...
In a note on the tranfcript with which Mr. Capell was furnished , it is said , that "
the people of those parts pronounce low se like Lucy . ” They do so at this day in
Scotland . Mr. Wilkes , grandson of the gentleman to whom Mr. Jones repeated
the ...
Page 7
It is at this time , and upon this accident , that he is said to have made his first
acquaintance in the playhouse . He was received into the company then in being
, at first in a very mean rank , but his admirable wit , and the natural turn of it to the
...
It is at this time , and upon this accident , that he is said to have made his first
acquaintance in the playhouse . He was received into the company then in being
, at first in a very mean rank , but his admirable wit , and the natural turn of it to the
...
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