The Works of Mr. William Shakespear, Volume 7J. Darby, 1725 |
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Results 1-5 of 65
Page xv
... perfect Knowledge of the Antients would have given him ; fo great a Genius as his would have made him a very dangerous Rival in Fame to the greatest Poets of Antiquity : So far am I from feeing , how this Knowledge could either have ...
... perfect Knowledge of the Antients would have given him ; fo great a Genius as his would have made him a very dangerous Rival in Fame to the greatest Poets of Antiquity : So far am I from feeing , how this Knowledge could either have ...
Page xv
... perfect a Critick in the Latin , as he himself was ; but yet that he was capable of reading at least the Latin Poets ; as is , I think , plainly prov'd . For I can fee no manner of Weight in that Conjecture , which fuppofes that he ...
... perfect a Critick in the Latin , as he himself was ; but yet that he was capable of reading at least the Latin Poets ; as is , I think , plainly prov'd . For I can fee no manner of Weight in that Conjecture , which fuppofes that he ...
Page xv
... perfect than he is , had his Ignorance of them been much less , than it really was . A judicious Reader of our Author will eafily discover those De- fects , that his Beauties would make him with had been corrected by a Knowledge of the ...
... perfect than he is , had his Ignorance of them been much less , than it really was . A judicious Reader of our Author will eafily discover those De- fects , that his Beauties would make him with had been corrected by a Knowledge of the ...
Page xv
... perfect Knowledge of the Antients would have given him ; fo great a Genius as his would have made him a very dangerous Rival in Fame to the greatest Poets of Antiquity : So far am I from feeing , how this Knowledge could either have ...
... perfect Knowledge of the Antients would have given him ; fo great a Genius as his would have made him a very dangerous Rival in Fame to the greatest Poets of Antiquity : So far am I from feeing , how this Knowledge could either have ...
Page xv
... perfect a Critick in the Latin , as he himself was ; but yet that he was capable of reading at least the Latin Poets ; as is , I think , plainly prov'd . For I can fee no manner of Weight in that Conjecture , which fuppofes that he ...
... perfect a Critick in the Latin , as he himself was ; but yet that he was capable of reading at least the Latin Poets ; as is , I think , plainly prov'd . For I can fee no manner of Weight in that Conjecture , which fuppofes that he ...
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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