The Plays of William Shakspeare ...J. Nichols and Son; F.C. and J. Rivington; J. Stockdale; W. Lowndes; G. Wilkie and J. Robinson; T. Egerton; J. Walker; Scatcherd and Letterman; W. Clarke and Sons; J. White and Company; B. Crosby and Company; W. Earle; J. Gray and Son, 1813 - 21 pages |
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Page 1
... suppose any Portrait of that description could have occurred , and much less that he himself should have been instrumental in producing it . He is happy , however , to find he was mistaken in both his suppositions ; and conse- quently ...
... suppose any Portrait of that description could have occurred , and much less that he himself should have been instrumental in producing it . He is happy , however , to find he was mistaken in both his suppositions ; and conse- quently ...
Page 8
... suppose that the mutilated state of it pre- vented either of their Lordships from becoming its purchaser . How far the report on which Mr. Wilson's nar- ratives ( respecting the place where this picture was met with , & c . ) were built ...
... suppose that the mutilated state of it pre- vented either of their Lordships from becoming its purchaser . How far the report on which Mr. Wilson's nar- ratives ( respecting the place where this picture was met with , & c . ) were built ...
Page 11
... suppose too , that the booksellers who employed Droeshout , discovered the object of their research by the direction of Ben Jonson , who in the following lines has borne the most ample testimony to the verisimilitude of a portrait which ...
... suppose too , that the booksellers who employed Droeshout , discovered the object of their research by the direction of Ben Jonson , who in the following lines has borne the most ample testimony to the verisimilitude of a portrait which ...
Page 22
... suppose , that a resemblance of our excel- lent dramatick poet might have been found in the house of a nobleman who is reported to have loved him well enough to have presented him with a thousand pounds . the subscription for an ...
... suppose , that a resemblance of our excel- lent dramatick poet might have been found in the house of a nobleman who is reported to have loved him well enough to have presented him with a thousand pounds . the subscription for an ...
Page 25
... suppose it must have belonged to his family , who ( as Mark Antony says of a hair of Cćsar ) would 66 66 -have mention'd it within their wills , Bequeathing it as a rich legacy " Unto their issue ; " and were there ground for the report ...
... suppose it must have belonged to his family , who ( as Mark Antony says of a hair of Cćsar ) would 66 66 -have mention'd it within their wills , Bequeathing it as a rich legacy " Unto their issue ; " and were there ground for the report ...
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Common terms and phrases
ancient appears baptized Ben Jonson bequeath better buried censure character Clopton Combe comedy conjecture copies criticism daughter death died dramatick Droeshout edition editor Edward Nash Elizabeth English engraved executors folio Gent gentleman George Hart Hall Hamlet hath heirs honour imitated John Barnard John Shakspere Jonson judgment Judith Julius Cćsar labour language learning lived London Love's Labour's Lost MALONE married monument nature never New-Place notes observed opinion original passages perhaps picture players plays poet poet's Pope portrait pounds preface printed probably publick quarto reader Register Richard Romeo and Juliet Rowe says scenes seems Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sir John Barnard speare stage STEEVENS Stratford Stratford-upon-Avon suppose Susanna Susanna Hall theatre Theobald thing Thomas Nash Thomas Quiney thought tion Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida unto verses Warwickshire Welcombe wife William Shakespeare William Shakspeare writings written