Oh, where 's the bard, who at one view 'Tis Shakspeare. In the first seat, in robe of various dies Ibid. CHURCHILL. Yes! jealous wits may still for empire strive * Thus Pope, in his Temple of Fame, speaking of Aristotle: "His piercing eyes, erect, appear to view "Superior worlds, and look all Nature through." Steevens. VOL, I. Kk AS RAPHAEL's own creation grac'd his hearse,* KEATE to VOLTAIRE, 1768. * The TRANSFIGURATION, that well known picture of RAPHAEL, was carried before his body to the grave, doing more real honour to his memory than either his epitaph in the Pantheon, the famous distich of CARDINAL BEMBO, or all the other adulatory verses written on the same occasion. Keate. VOL. I. - by Steevens, Shakspeare's Coat of Arms, Advertisement by Mr. Reed, Preface to Mr. Richardson's Proposals, Proposals by Mr. Richardson, Supplement to the Proposals of Mr. Richardson, Advertisement by Mr. Steevens, Rowe's Life of Shakspeare, Anecdotes of Shakspeare, from Oldys, Baptisms, Marriages, &c. Page 1 4 6 12 14 18 37 81 90 99 Shakspeare's Mortgage, 101 Shakspeare's Will, 104 Preface by Hemings and Condell, Dedication by Hemings and Condell, 109 111 by Johnson, 112 by Pope, 151 Advertisement to 20 Plays by Steevens, 162 - Introduction by Capell, Advertisement by Steevens, Preface by M. Mason, Advertisement by Reed, Preface by Malone, - by Theobald, to the second edition, Advertisement to the third edition, Farmer's Essay on the Learning of Shakspeare, 170 211 224 226 228 275 293 295 296 346 |