The Works of Mr. William Shakespear, Volume 7J. Darby, 1725 |
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Page iii
... Poet in my Hand than SHAKESPEAR ; the dead Ornament of the English Nation , being the most proper Prefent to its Living Glory . He , My LORD , has shared the Fate common to every great Genius , receiving very A 2 ill 3925 1725 ill ...
... Poet in my Hand than SHAKESPEAR ; the dead Ornament of the English Nation , being the most proper Prefent to its Living Glory . He , My LORD , has shared the Fate common to every great Genius , receiving very A 2 ill 3925 1725 ill ...
Page viii
... Poet , the Printers have been hitherto as careful to multiply them , as if they had been real Beauties thinking perhaps with the Indians that the disfiguring a good Face with Scars of artificial Brutes , had improv'd the Form and ...
... Poet , the Printers have been hitherto as careful to multiply them , as if they had been real Beauties thinking perhaps with the Indians that the disfiguring a good Face with Scars of artificial Brutes , had improv'd the Form and ...
Page ix
... Poet moft in Vogue at that time . To make this Argu- ment the stronger , Spenfer is taken notice of in one of thefe ... Poets have fprung from Spenfer than all our other English Writers ; to which let me add an Obfervation of the late Dr ...
... Poet moft in Vogue at that time . To make this Argu- ment the stronger , Spenfer is taken notice of in one of thefe ... Poets have fprung from Spenfer than all our other English Writers ; to which let me add an Obfervation of the late Dr ...
Page x
... Poets . AND yet I cannot place his Learning fo low as others have done , there being evident Marks thro all his Writings of ... Poet . Nor are these Letters fo very easy for a common Tranf lator : For there is a good deal of the Heathen ...
... Poets . AND yet I cannot place his Learning fo low as others have done , there being evident Marks thro all his Writings of ... Poet . Nor are these Letters fo very easy for a common Tranf lator : For there is a good deal of the Heathen ...
Page xiv
... Poet , SHAKESPEAR , may witness for our good Ear and manly Relish . Notwithstand- ing his natural Rudeness , his unpolifh'd Style , his antiquated " Phrase and Wit , his want of Method and Coherence , and his De ficiency in almost all ...
... Poet , SHAKESPEAR , may witness for our good Ear and manly Relish . Notwithstand- ing his natural Rudeness , his unpolifh'd Style , his antiquated " Phrase and Wit , his want of Method and Coherence , and his De ficiency in almost all ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adonis againſt Agamemnon Antients Beauty becauſe beft beſt betwixt Breaſt call'd Cauſe Character Comedy cou'd Death Defign Defire Diſcovery doft doth e'er Euripides Eyes Fable faid fair falfe fame Father Faults Fear feems feen felf fhall fhew fhould fhow filly fince firft firſt flain fome fomething ftill ftrong fuch fweet give Grief hath Heart himſelf Honour juft juſt King laſt leaft leaſt lefs loft look Love Love's Lucrece Luft Menelaus Miſtreſs moft moſt muft muſt Nature never Night Numbers obferve Paffion Perfons Pindar Plautus Play pleaſe Pleaſure Poem Poet Praiſe Priam Profpero quoth Reaſon reft ſay Scene ſee ſeem ſeen ſelf Senfe Shakespear ſhall Shame ſhe ſome Sophocles ſpeak ſtand ſtay ſtill ſweet Tarquin Tears thee thefe themſelves theſe thine thing thofe thoſe thou art Thoughts thouſand thro Tragedy uſe Venus Verſe Whilft whofe whoſe Wife wou'd