A Study of Shakespeare |
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Page 55
... equally from without and from within , by evidence of tradition and by evidence of style . There is therefore proof irresistible and unmistak- able of at least a double authorship ; and the one reasonable conclusion left to us would ...
... equally from without and from within , by evidence of tradition and by evidence of style . There is therefore proof irresistible and unmistak- able of at least a double authorship ; and the one reasonable conclusion left to us would ...
Page 58
... equally likely to occur to the original writer on glancing over his printed text or to a poet of kindred power , who , while busied in retouching and filling out the sketch of his prede- cessor , might be struck by the opening for so ...
... equally likely to occur to the original writer on glancing over his printed text or to a poet of kindred power , who , while busied in retouching and filling out the sketch of his prede- cessor , might be struck by the opening for so ...
Page 112
... equally daring and calculating statesmen- warriors whose two most terrible , most perfect , and most famous types are Louis XI . and Cæsar Borgia . Gain , " commodity , " the principle of self - interest which never but in word and in ...
... equally daring and calculating statesmen- warriors whose two most terrible , most perfect , and most famous types are Louis XI . and Cæsar Borgia . Gain , " commodity , " the principle of self - interest which never but in word and in ...
Page 127
... than the expression of such gratitude and respect could reasonably be supposed to imply an equally blind confidence in the authority or the value of that version of Shakespeare's text which has been A Study of Shakespeare . 127.
... than the expression of such gratitude and respect could reasonably be supposed to imply an equally blind confidence in the authority or the value of that version of Shakespeare's text which has been A Study of Shakespeare . 127.
Page 129
... equally inexpressible surprise that I find Mr. Collier accepting as Shakespeare's any part of A Warning for Fair Women , and rejecting without compromise or hesitation the belief or theory which would assign to the youth of Shake ...
... equally inexpressible surprise that I find Mr. Collier accepting as Shakespeare's any part of A Warning for Fair Women , and rejecting without compromise or hesitation the belief or theory which would assign to the youth of Shake ...
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Common terms and phrases
admirable Æschylus assuredly authorship beauty Bessus blank verse BRET HARTE character Christopher Marlowe cloth extra Coloured comedy comic Countess criticism Crown 8vo Demy 8vo divine dramatic Edited English Essay evidence eyes Facsimile Falstaff fancy figure Fletcher genius genuine gilt Hamlet hand heart History honour humour Iago JAMES PAYN JOHN Juliet JUSTIN MCCARTHY King Henry labour least less Love's Labour's Lost lyric Marlowe Marlowe's master metre Molière natural never noble Noble Kinsmen Notes numerous Illustrations once original Othello OUIDA passage passion perfect period play poem poet poetic poetry Portrait proof prose Queen Rabelais reader rhyme Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene sense Shake Shakespeare single sketch sonnets speare speare's speech spirit stage style surely sweet thou thought tion touch tragedy tragic Vols Warning for Fair whole WILKIE COLLINS words worth writer written
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