The Poems of ShakespeareWilliam Pickering, 1832 - 288 pages |
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Page vi
... desire to be put out of the company , and Mr. Shakspere doth not come to the halls , when they be warned , nor hath not done of long time . " 10 At the bottom of the grant of arms to John Shakespeare , made in 1596 , is a note , " That ...
... desire to be put out of the company , and Mr. Shakspere doth not come to the halls , when they be warned , nor hath not done of long time . " 10 At the bottom of the grant of arms to John Shakespeare , made in 1596 , is a note , " That ...
Page xxvi
... desire of pleasing an audience accustomed to exaggera- tion both of incident and style , than to his want of taste . He was the first great improver of blank verse , to which he gave a happy variety of pause . The lines in which Drayton ...
... desire of pleasing an audience accustomed to exaggera- tion both of incident and style , than to his want of taste . He was the first great improver of blank verse , to which he gave a happy variety of pause . The lines in which Drayton ...
Page xxix
... desires to be , acquainted with Mar- lowe , and that in his capacity of editor , he had struck out from the Address in the Groatsworth of Wit several offensive passages concerning him . Of Shakespeare he speaks thus : " The other ...
... desires to be , acquainted with Mar- lowe , and that in his capacity of editor , he had struck out from the Address in the Groatsworth of Wit several offensive passages concerning him . Of Shakespeare he speaks thus : " The other ...
Page lxviii
... desire ; Then fade those flowers which deck'd her pride so long . When if she grieve to gaze her in her glass , Which then presents her winter - wither'd hue , Go you , my verse , go tell her what she was ; For what she was , she best ...
... desire ; Then fade those flowers which deck'd her pride so long . When if she grieve to gaze her in her glass , Which then presents her winter - wither'd hue , Go you , my verse , go tell her what she was ; For what she was , she best ...
Page lxxiii
... desires , And such as modesty might well approve . Then , since I love those virtuous parts in thee , Should'st thou not love this virtuous mind in me ? " The greater portion of Shakespeare's Sonnets is addressed to a male object ; and ...
... desires , And such as modesty might well approve . Then , since I love those virtuous parts in thee , Should'st thou not love this virtuous mind in me ? " The greater portion of Shakespeare's Sonnets is addressed to a male object ; and ...
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Common terms and phrases
Adonis bear beauty beauty's behold Ben Jonson bequeath blood Boswell breast breath cheeks Collatine daughter dead dear death delight desire doth dramas English Dram face fair false fault fear fire flower foul Francis Collins gentle give grace grief Hamnet hand hast hate hath hear heart heaven honour John Shakespeare Jonson king kiss lips live looks Lord love's Lucrece lust Malone may'st mind never night pale pity play poet poison'd poor praise proud queen quoth Rape of Lucrece Richard Barnefield Richard Burbage Shak Shakespeare shame sighs sight sing Sonnets sorrow soul Stratford Susanna Hall sweet Tarquin tears theatre thee thine eye thing Thomas Lucy thou art thou dost thou wilt thought thyself time's tongue true truth unto Venus and Adonis verse weep Welcombe William William Shakespeare wind WITCH words wound Yorkshire Tragedy youth