The Plays of William Shakespeare,: In Eight Volumes, with the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators;J. and R. Tonson, C. Corbet, H. Woodfall, J. Rivington, R. Baldwin [and 6 others in London], 1765 |
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... hope for eminence from the herefies of paradox ; or those , who , being forced by disappointment upon confolatory expedients , are willing to hope from pofterity what the present age refuses , and flatter themselves that the regard ...
... hope for eminence from the herefies of paradox ; or those , who , being forced by disappointment upon confolatory expedients , are willing to hope from pofterity what the present age refuses , and flatter themselves that the regard ...
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... hope or fear from the flux of years ; but works tentative and experimental muft be eftimated by their proportion to the general and col- lective ability of man , as it is difcovered in a long fucceffion of endeavours . Of the first ...
... hope or fear from the flux of years ; but works tentative and experimental muft be eftimated by their proportion to the general and col- lective ability of man , as it is difcovered in a long fucceffion of endeavours . Of the first ...
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... catching modifh innovations , and the learned depart from established forms of fpeech , in hope of finding or , making better ; thofe who wish for diftinction for- fake the vulgar , when the vulgar is right ; i fake PREFACE .
... catching modifh innovations , and the learned depart from established forms of fpeech , in hope of finding or , making better ; thofe who wish for diftinction for- fake the vulgar , when the vulgar is right ; i fake PREFACE .
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... hope to add dignity or force to the fo- liloquy of Cato . } A play read , affects the mind like a play acted . It is therefore evident , that the action is not fup- pofed to be real , and it follows that between the acts a longer or ...
... hope to add dignity or force to the fo- liloquy of Cato . } A play read , affects the mind like a play acted . It is therefore evident , that the action is not fup- pofed to be real , and it follows that between the acts a longer or ...
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... hope was at an end ; he folicited no addition of honour from the reader . He therefore made no fcruple to repeat the fame jefts in many dialogues , or to entangle differ- ent plots by the fame knot of perplexity , which may be at least ...
... hope was at an end ; he folicited no addition of honour from the reader . He therefore made no fcruple to repeat the fame jefts in many dialogues , or to entangle differ- ent plots by the fame knot of perplexity , which may be at least ...
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The Plays of William Shakespeare in Eight Volumes: With the ..., Volume 1 William Shakespeare,Samuel Johnson Visualização integral - 1765 |
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