The Poems of ShakespeareWilliam Pickering, 1832 - 288 pages |
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Page xl
... rest of their associats , freely to use & exercise the arte and faculty of playing Comedies , Tragedies , His- tories , Enterludes , Moralls , Pastoralls , Stage plaies , and such other like , as thei have already studied , or hereafter ...
... rest of their associats , freely to use & exercise the arte and faculty of playing Comedies , Tragedies , His- tories , Enterludes , Moralls , Pastoralls , Stage plaies , and such other like , as thei have already studied , or hereafter ...
Page xlix
... rest assured , that he who wrote the incom- parable instructions to the player in Hamlet , would never offend his audience by an injudicious performance . In Every Man in his Humour , produced with alterations at the Blackfriars in ...
... rest assured , that he who wrote the incom- parable instructions to the player in Hamlet , would never offend his audience by an injudicious performance . In Every Man in his Humour , produced with alterations at the Blackfriars in ...
Page lxiii
... rest of that illustrious brotherhood ; but I feel that over the worst of Shakespeare's dramas , his genius has diffused a peculiar charm , of which their best productions are entirely des- titute ; and to insinuate that any of his ...
... rest of that illustrious brotherhood ; but I feel that over the worst of Shakespeare's dramas , his genius has diffused a peculiar charm , of which their best productions are entirely des- titute ; and to insinuate that any of his ...
Page lxvi
... rest . The bird's estate I may compare with mine , To whom fond love doth work such wrongs by day , That in the night my heart must needs repine , And storm with sighs , to ease me as I may , Whilst others are becalm'd , or lie them ...
... rest . The bird's estate I may compare with mine , To whom fond love doth work such wrongs by day , That in the night my heart must needs repine , And storm with sighs , to ease me as I may , Whilst others are becalm'd , or lie them ...
Page lxx
... rest , Where Paradise may me relieve , opprest . Lend to my tongue an angel's voice to sing ; Thy praise , my comfort ; and for ever bring My notes thereof from the bright east to west . Thy mercy lend unto my soul distrest , Thy grace ...
... rest , Where Paradise may me relieve , opprest . Lend to my tongue an angel's voice to sing ; Thy praise , my comfort ; and for ever bring My notes thereof from the bright east to west . Thy mercy lend unto my soul distrest , Thy grace ...
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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