The Plays and Poems of William Shakspeare, Band 1F. C. and J. Rivington; T. Egerton; J. Cuthell; Scatcherd and Letterman; Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown; Cadell and Davies ... [and 28 others in London], J. Deighton and sons, Cambridge: Wilson and son, York: and Stirling and Slade, Fairbairn and Anderson, and D. Brown, Edinburgh., 1821 |
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Seite xii
... give us a more lively picture of the cholerick monarch , and the blunt freedom which characterizes the faithful Kent ... gives this passage with the word well twice repeated , because others may think with myself , that this iteration is ...
... give us a more lively picture of the cholerick monarch , and the blunt freedom which characterizes the faithful Kent ... gives this passage with the word well twice repeated , because others may think with myself , that this iteration is ...
Seite xix
... give him more of a German cast of thinking than really be- longed to him ; but after all the deductions which candour can make , there will still remain sufficient ground for the general admiration which has been bestowed upon a work at ...
... give him more of a German cast of thinking than really be- longed to him ; but after all the deductions which candour can make , there will still remain sufficient ground for the general admiration which has been bestowed upon a work at ...
Seite xx
... give it a place as one of the sections of Mr. Malone's Biography . The reader , I have no doubt , will derive no small satisfaction from the many curious particulars which my late friend's research enabled him to collect upon this ...
... give it a place as one of the sections of Mr. Malone's Biography . The reader , I have no doubt , will derive no small satisfaction from the many curious particulars which my late friend's research enabled him to collect upon this ...
Seite xxvii
... give further currency to what Mr. Malone did not hesitate to declare a fabrication , although I have preserved Mr. Steevens's amusing essays in its defence . The publick , however , naturally feel anxious to be put in possession of any ...
... give further currency to what Mr. Malone did not hesitate to declare a fabrication , although I have preserved Mr. Steevens's amusing essays in its defence . The publick , however , naturally feel anxious to be put in possession of any ...
Seite xxxv
... give up his own opinion , but only abstains from giving a gentleman , with whom he was then living on terms of intimacy , a direct and blunt contradiction . My principal object is to defend my late friend's integrity ; but I will step ...
... give up his own opinion , but only abstains from giving a gentleman , with whom he was then living on terms of intimacy , a direct and blunt contradiction . My principal object is to defend my late friend's integrity ; but I will step ...
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