Johnson on ShakespeareOxford University Press, 1959 - 208 ページ |
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... meaning ; and therefore , on Johnson's principle , should stand . Its meaning , moreover , is better suited to Hamlet and to Shakespeare than the elaborate mythological argument implied in Warburton's emen- dation . If the ' good ...
... meaning ; and therefore , on Johnson's principle , should stand . Its meaning , moreover , is better suited to Hamlet and to Shakespeare than the elaborate mythological argument implied in Warburton's emen- dation . If the ' good ...
3 ページ
... meaning of our phrases was yet in fluctuation , when words were adopted at pleasure from the neighbouring languages , and while the Saxon was still visibly mingled in our diction . The reader is therefore embarrassed at once with dead ...
... meaning of our phrases was yet in fluctuation , when words were adopted at pleasure from the neighbouring languages , and while the Saxon was still visibly mingled in our diction . The reader is therefore embarrassed at once with dead ...
75 ページ
... meaning , but , perhaps not , even in his own opinion , the meaning of Shakespear . That the passage is more or less corrupt , I believe every reader will agree with the Editors . I am not convinced that a line is lost , as Mr. Theobald ...
... meaning , but , perhaps not , even in his own opinion , the meaning of Shakespear . That the passage is more or less corrupt , I believe every reader will agree with the Editors . I am not convinced that a line is lost , as Mr. Theobald ...
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action allusions ancient Atalanta authour balves beauty Boswell Caliban censure character comedy comick common conjecture considered copies corrupt criticism criticks delight dialogue diction dignity diligence discover drama dramatick easily edition editor elegance emendation endeavoured English Euripides excellence exhibited expression Falstaff faults favour foll genius George Steevens Guy of Warwick Hamlet Henry VI honour human imagination imitation incidents inserted Johnson KING HENRY knowledge known labour language learned Macbeth manners meaning mind nature never notes numbers obscure observation opinion Othello passages passions perform perhaps Plautus play pleasure poet Pope praise produce publick reader reason remarks Richard ridicule says SCENE iv SCENE viii seems sense sentiment Shakespeare Shakespeare's editors shew shewn sometimes speech stage story sufficient suppose Tatler testimony of equal Theobald things thou thought tion tragedy truth virtue Voltaire Warburton William Shakespeare words writers