The Canons of Criticism, and Glossary, Being a Supplement to Mr. Warburton's Edition of Shakespear: Collected from the Notes in that Celebrated Work, and Proper to be Bound Up with itC. Bathurst, opposite St. Dunstan's Church in Fleet-street., 1758 - 344 páginas This work contains severe criticism of Warburton's work. Warburton was involved in several literary controversies. |
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Página 2
... these I may defend from blot or blame : But ill I bear , that any worthy name Of those , who virtue for their mistress take , And hate the fland'rer like the poisonous snake ; Should deem my juft reproof deferving blame . Yet , if fair ...
... these I may defend from blot or blame : But ill I bear , that any worthy name Of those , who virtue for their mistress take , And hate the fland'rer like the poisonous snake ; Should deem my juft reproof deferving blame . Yet , if fair ...
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... these notes were among the amufements of his younger years : and as for the Canons of Cri- ticism and the Gloffary which he promised , he abfolves himself , and leaves his readers to collect them out of his notes . I defire to know , by ...
... these notes were among the amufements of his younger years : and as for the Canons of Cri- ticism and the Gloffary which he promised , he abfolves himself , and leaves his readers to collect them out of his notes . I defire to know , by ...
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... interprets a thing of no vowels . by i . e . without fenfe ; yet on other occafions he * Merry Wives of Windfor , Vol . 1. p . 290. Vol . 7. p . 398 . 3 b feems feems very fond of these elifions , fo much avoided INTRODUCTION . 27.
... interprets a thing of no vowels . by i . e . without fenfe ; yet on other occafions he * Merry Wives of Windfor , Vol . 1. p . 290. Vol . 7. p . 398 . 3 b feems feems very fond of these elifions , fo much avoided INTRODUCTION . 27.
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... these elifions , fo much avoided by the ill - judging poets . In 1 Hen . VI . Vol . 4. P. 489. where the vulgar editions , that is , all but his own , have , -'tis prefent death . He affures us , that Shakespear wrote ; -i'th ' prefence ...
... these elifions , fo much avoided by the ill - judging poets . In 1 Hen . VI . Vol . 4. P. 489. where the vulgar editions , that is , all but his own , have , -'tis prefent death . He affures us , that Shakespear wrote ; -i'th ' prefence ...
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... these women were only inftruments : and it is treat- ed throughout the fcene , by Angelo and the Duke too , not as folly ; but as malicious wickedness . EXAMP . X. Vol . 3. P. 49. ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL . -many a man's tongue fakes ...
... these women were only inftruments : and it is treat- ed throughout the fcene , by Angelo and the Duke too , not as folly ; but as malicious wickedness . EXAMP . X. Vol . 3. P. 49. ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL . -many a man's tongue fakes ...
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The Canons of Criticism and Glossary: Being a Supplement to Mr. Warburton's ... Thomas Edwards Visualização completa - 1765 |
Termos e frases comuns
affertion againſt alfo allufion alteration anfwer authority becauſe beſt cafe called CANON caufe cauſe chooſe CORIOLANUS CYMBELINE defign Dunciad edition emendation Engliſh EXAMP expreffed expreffion faid fame fatire feems fenfe fenſe fentiment fhall fhew fhould read fignify fince firft firſt fome fpeaking fpear fpeech ftand ftill ftrange fuch fuppofe furely give HENRY HENRY IV himſelf Ibid inftances itſelf juft JULIUS CÆSAR juſt King KING LEAR laft laſt LEAR loft MACBETH mean meaſure MEASURE FOR MEASURE metaphor miſtake moft moſt muft muſt nonfenfe obfervation occafion OTHELLO Oxford editor paffage perfon poet Pope praiſe Pref prefent Profeffed Critic purpoſe reafon ſays ſeems ſenſe Shakeſpear wrote ſhall Sir Thomas Hanmer SONNET ſpeak ſuppoſe thee thefe Theobald theſe thing thofe thoſe thou thought TIMON OF ATHENS true underſtand underſtood uſed verſe VIII WARB Warburton whofe whoſe word
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Página 39 - That they are not a pipe for fortune's finger To sound what stop she please. Give me that man That is not passion's slave, and I will wear him In my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart, As I do thee.
Página 146 - I'll take them, and there lie; And in that glorious supposition think He gains by death that hath such means to die.
Página 226 - And to prove it to sense, let any one read 'aloud an hundred lines in any other play, and an hundred in this, and, if he per'ceives not the tone and cadence of his own voice to be involuntarily altered in the 'latter case from what it was in the former, I would never...
Página 261 - Or thirst of wealth, thee from her banks divide: Reflect how calmly, like her infant wave, Flows the clear current of a private life: See the wide public stream, by tempests tost, Of every changing wind the sport or slave; Soil'd with corruption; vex'd with party strife; Cover'd with wrecks of peace and honor lost" Cambridge followed Edwards' advice and his own deep inclinations.
Página 73 - And bears his blufhing honours thick upon him : The third day, comes a froft, a killing froft ; And, — when he thinks, good eafy man, full furely His greatnefs is a ripening, — nips his root, And then he falls, as I do. I have ventur'd, Like little wanton boys that fwim on bladders, This many fummers in a fea of glory ; But far beyond my depth...
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Página 238 - Lycidas : But that two-handed engin at the door Stands ready to fmite once, and fmite no more. *' Thefe are the laft words of Peter, predicting <£ God's vengeance on his Church by his miniltry. " The making him the minifter, is in imitation of ** the Italian Poets; who in their fatiric pieces " againft the Church, always make Peter the mi
Página 31 - ... both, when they came to try them upon English authors. Secondly, To deter the unlearned writer from wantonly trifling with an art he is a stranger to, at the expence of his own reputation, and the integrity of the text of established authors. But these uses may be well supplied by what is occasionally said upon the subject, in the course of the following remarks.
Página 20 - He may find out a bawdy or immoral meaning in his Author where there does not appear to be any hint that way.