A few remarks on the emendation, 'Who smothers her with painting,' in the play of Cymbeline |
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Pagina 3
... language and its idioms have so imperceptibly altered during the last three centuries - that whilst the casual observer might imagine the language of Elizabeth's time was almost identical with that spoken at the present day - even the ...
... language and its idioms have so imperceptibly altered during the last three centuries - that whilst the casual observer might imagine the language of Elizabeth's time was almost identical with that spoken at the present day - even the ...
Pagina 5
... language underwent greater changes be- tween 1600 and 1630 in that respect than have since taken place , even were we to include the two centu- ries and upwards which have now elapsed . In fact , for the last century and a half ...
... language underwent greater changes be- tween 1600 and 1630 in that respect than have since taken place , even were we to include the two centu- ries and upwards which have now elapsed . In fact , for the last century and a half ...
Pagina 6
... language and literature of the period , to have cleared up many difficulties , and enlightened many obscurities . At a late period in Shakespearian criticism , after nearly all the harvest had been supposed to have been garnered , Mr ...
... language and literature of the period , to have cleared up many difficulties , and enlightened many obscurities . At a late period in Shakespearian criticism , after nearly all the harvest had been supposed to have been garnered , Mr ...
Pagina 8
... language can be produced in any contemporary writer ; and it must be at once rejected , if the like idiom can be dis- covered in other parts of the works of Shakespeare himself . With these reservations , it would be unjust not to ...
... language can be produced in any contemporary writer ; and it must be at once rejected , if the like idiom can be dis- covered in other parts of the works of Shakespeare himself . With these reservations , it would be unjust not to ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
A Few Remarks on the Emendation, Who Smothers Her with Painting , in the ... J. O. (James Orchar Halliwell-Phillipps Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2012 |
FEW REMARKS ON THE EMENDATION J. O. (James Orchar Halliwell-Phillipps Geen voorbeeld beschikbaar - 2016 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admit All's alteration apprehensive senses authentic authority Boaden cloth collective edition Collier conceited feather-caps conjectural constancies Expire contemporary copies corrections corrector courtesan courtesan's painting creature of Painting curious Drama early quarto Edition of Shakespeare Edition of Shakespeare's emendation English idiom English language facsimiles fashion father flame lacks oil FRITH STREET garment guiled shore Halliwell's Hamlet hath betray'd idiomatic passage imagery Imogen Ireland's W. H. J. O. Halliwell jay of Italy JOHN RUSSELL SMITH judgments Know'st literature Manuscripts MERE FATHERS mother never before published Observations old play old reading original parcel of conceited passage in Cymbeline person philology phraseology PLAY OF CYMBELINE Poet Poet's PRINTED Publications illustrative quoted quoth reference respecting second folio second line sewed Shakespeare Forgeries Shakespeare MSS Shakespeare's Plays Shakespeare's text Shakespearian criticism snuff Of younger SOHO SQUARE Steevens Stratford-on-Avon student things disdain Thou villain base thy grandfather thy tailor Tyrwhitt unauthorised volume younger spirits
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Pagina 1 - A FEW Remarks on the Emendation, " Who Smothers her with Painting," in the Play of Cymbeline, discovered by Mr. Collier, in a Corrected Copy of the Second Edition of Shakespeare, by J.