Memoirs of the Life of William Shakespeare: With an Essay Toward the Expression of His Genius, and an Account of the Rise and Progress of the English Drama |
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Página 6
There seems , therefore , to be no good reason for deviating from the orthog .
raphy to which Shakespeare and his contemporaries gave a kind of formal
recognition . As to the superior martial significance of this name to all others , we
have ...
There seems , therefore , to be no good reason for deviating from the orthog .
raphy to which Shakespeare and his contemporaries gave a kind of formal
recognition . As to the superior martial significance of this name to all others , we
have ...
Página 26
... and whether she had transmitted any of them to her son , we cannot tell . In
which ignorance there is a kind of bliss to those people who have taken up the
novel notion of the day , that men of mark derive their mental and their moral gifts
...
... and whether she had transmitted any of them to her son , we cannot tell . In
which ignorance there is a kind of bliss to those people who have taken up the
novel notion of the day , that men of mark derive their mental and their moral gifts
...
Página 30
where , unless it differed from all others of its kind , he could have learned Latin
and some Greek . Some English too ; but not much , for English was held in scorn
by the scholars of those days , and long after . The only qualifications for ...
where , unless it differed from all others of its kind , he could have learned Latin
and some Greek . Some English too ; but not much , for English was held in scorn
by the scholars of those days , and long after . The only qualifications for ...
Página 31
than beating ; but , aside from question of the kind of training to which he was
subjected , it was well perhaps for William Shakespeare that his masters knew
only what he then was . Insight of the future would not always bring good fortune .
than beating ; but , aside from question of the kind of training to which he was
subjected , it was well perhaps for William Shakespeare that his masters knew
only what he then was . Insight of the future would not always bring good fortune .
Página 49
That temperament is cruel , and that morality pharisaic , which treats all cases of
this kind with inexorable and indiscriminating severity , and that judgment
outrageously unjust which visits all the sin upon the weaker and already suffering
party .
That temperament is cruel , and that morality pharisaic , which treats all cases of
this kind with inexorable and indiscriminating severity , and that judgment
outrageously unjust which visits all the sin upon the weaker and already suffering
party .
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Memoirs of the Life of William Shakespeare: With an Essay Toward the ... Richard Grant White Visualização integral - 1865 |
Memoirs of the Life of William Shakespeare: With an Essay Toward the ... Richard Grant White Visualização integral - 1865 |
Memoirs of the Life of William Shakespeare: With an Essay Toward the ... Richard Grant White Visualização integral - 1866 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
according actor appears born brought called century character common contemporaries critics death direction dramatic early Elizabethan England English enter equally evidence expression fact fancy father friends genius give given hand Henry honor imagination interest Italy John kind King knowledge known labor language Latin least less letter lines lived London Lord means mind moral nature never passage passed performance period personages players plays poet present probably produced reason record regard remarkable respect Richard says scene seems seen Shake Shakespeare shows soul speak speare speech stage story Stratford style sure tells theatre Thomas thou thought tion tradition Tragedy true truth verse wife William Shakespeare writing written wrote