The Plays of William Shakspeare, Volume 2 |
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Página 5
Comedy of Much Ado about Nothing 6 This could not have been the work of
Shakspeare , as the death of Jane Shore makes no part of his drama .
STEEVENS . 7 Probably the play before that of Shakspeare . STEEVENS . Surely
this must ...
Comedy of Much Ado about Nothing 6 This could not have been the work of
Shakspeare , as the death of Jane Shore makes no part of his drama .
STEEVENS . 7 Probably the play before that of Shakspeare . STEEVENS . Surely
this must ...
Página 17
... to cause some bookseller to make immediate entries of their new pieces , as a
security against the encroachments of their rivals , who always considered
themselves as justified in the exhibition of such dramas as had been
enfranchised by ...
... to cause some bookseller to make immediate entries of their new pieces , as a
security against the encroachments of their rivals , who always considered
themselves as justified in the exhibition of such dramas as had been
enfranchised by ...
Página 50
The Morality of Shakspeare's Drama illustrated . By Mrs. Griffith . 8vo . 1775 . A
Letter to George Hardinge , Efq . on the Subject of a Passage in Mr. Steevens's
Preface to his Impression of Shakspeare . [ By the Rev. Mr. Collins . ] 4to . 1777.
The Morality of Shakspeare's Drama illustrated . By Mrs. Griffith . 8vo . 1775 . A
Letter to George Hardinge , Efq . on the Subject of a Passage in Mr. Steevens's
Preface to his Impression of Shakspeare . [ By the Rev. Mr. Collins . ] 4to . 1777.
Página 56
... this object being still kept in view , the toil of wading through all such reading
as was never read has been cheerfully endured , because no labour was thought
too great , that might enable us to add one new laurel to the father of our drama .
... this object being still kept in view , the toil of wading through all such reading
as was never read has been cheerfully endured , because no labour was thought
too great , that might enable us to add one new laurel to the father of our drama .
Página 57
... which he rose from mediocrity to * It is not pretended that a regular scale of
gradual improvement is here presented to the publick : or that , if even
Shakfpeare himself had left us a chronological lift of his dramas , it would exhibit
such a scale .
... which he rose from mediocrity to * It is not pretended that a regular scale of
gradual improvement is here presented to the publick : or that , if even
Shakfpeare himself had left us a chronological lift of his dramas , it would exhibit
such a scale .
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