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 ix
... with a mingling of confidence and diffidence which it would be difficult to
explain , he now ventures to offer his conclusions as hints and aids to others ;
conscious the while that those who can judge them best are those who need
them least .
... with a mingling of confidence and diffidence which it would be difficult to
explain , he now ventures to offer his conclusions as hints and aids to others ;
conscious the while that those who can judge them best are those who need
them least .
Página xi
... we owe each other , if not mutual regard , at least a mutual consideration ,
respect , and confidence heartier than that which befits the merely formal
intercourse of two nations which are called friendly because they are not at open
enmity .
... we owe each other , if not mutual regard , at least a mutual consideration ,
respect , and confidence heartier than that which befits the merely formal
intercourse of two nations which are called friendly because they are not at open
enmity .
Página 8
they had no small part in their possession . * Robert Arden's branch of this family
held lands in Snitterfield as far back , at least , as the early part of the fifteenth
century ; and he inherited his property there in direct succession . Two of the
family ...
they had no small part in their possession . * Robert Arden's branch of this family
held lands in Snitterfield as far back , at least , as the early part of the fifteenth
century ; and he inherited his property there in direct succession . Two of the
family ...
Página 15
And there were two score at least of children born that year in Stratford , who , in
the eyes of their parents and of the good townsfolk , were of just as much
importance , and of whose appearance in the world no other note was taken than
such ...
And there were two score at least of children born that year in Stratford , who , in
the eyes of their parents and of the good townsfolk , were of just as much
importance , and of whose appearance in the world no other note was taken than
such ...
Página 31
Genius does not teach facts ; and every man who has himself been through the
curriculum will see that the writer of that passage had surely , at least , passed
through the same course before the days of expurgated classics . Jonson's
phrase ...
Genius does not teach facts ; and every man who has himself been through the
curriculum will see that the writer of that passage had surely , at least , passed
through the same course before the days of expurgated classics . Jonson's
phrase ...
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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