The Shakspere Allusion-book: A Collection of Allusions to Shakspere from 1591 to 1700, Volume 1John James Munro Chatto & Windus, 1909 |
From inside the book
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Page xiv
... Fletcher were having a jest at Hamlet and plagiarising from Hotspur ; and Jonson , in the newly - acquired greatness of his laureateship , was censuring Shakspere's faults in the Prologue of Every Man in his Humour . In the following ...
... Fletcher were having a jest at Hamlet and plagiarising from Hotspur ; and Jonson , in the newly - acquired greatness of his laureateship , was censuring Shakspere's faults in the Prologue of Every Man in his Humour . In the following ...
Page xxxiii
... Fletcher and Shakspere , and the 1662 edition of Merlin is described as by Shakspere and Rowley . " title- ] Some of these plays are most wretched productions ; others have greater merit , but that any of them can have anything at all ...
... Fletcher and Shakspere , and the 1662 edition of Merlin is described as by Shakspere and Rowley . " title- ] Some of these plays are most wretched productions ; others have greater merit , but that any of them can have anything at all ...
Page xxxiv
... Fletcher continued to exercise a wide influence over the stage ; but it was long before the works of Shakspere were considered as models which playwrights might profitably study . We shall not expect to find , therefore , in Jacobean ...
... Fletcher continued to exercise a wide influence over the stage ; but it was long before the works of Shakspere were considered as models which playwrights might profitably study . We shall not expect to find , therefore , in Jacobean ...
Page xxxv
... Fletcher's Little French Lawyer . Other play - scraps were well known on the Elizabethan stage and were even quoted by Shakspere himself . First , there is Pistol's scrap : " haue wee not Hiren here ? " 7— probably from Peele's lost ...
... Fletcher's Little French Lawyer . Other play - scraps were well known on the Elizabethan stage and were even quoted by Shakspere himself . First , there is Pistol's scrap : " haue wee not Hiren here ? " 7— probably from Peele's lost ...
Page xxxvii
... Fletcher's Woman's Prize . A line in a madrigal of Sir W. Drummond's may be an echo of Sonnet 271 ; bits of Sonnet 47 are introduced by Sir John Suckling into his Tragedy of Brennoralt , 1646 , and that same author made a continuation ...
... Fletcher's Woman's Prize . A line in a madrigal of Sir W. Drummond's may be an echo of Sonnet 271 ; bits of Sonnet 47 are introduced by Sir John Suckling into his Tragedy of Brennoralt , 1646 , and that same author made a continuation ...
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Common terms and phrases
ALLN allusion Beaumont Ben Jonson beſt borrowings Collier Comedy copy death doth Drayton Dryden Dyce Eastward Hoe edition English extract Falstaff fame felfe fhall firſt Fletcher Folio fome fuch Grosart Hamlet hath haue Henry Henry IV Heywood himſelfe honour houſe imitated Iohn J. P. Collier James Shirley John Marston Jonson Julius Cæsar King Lady lines London Lord loue Lucrece Malone Massinger Merry moſt muſt night Oldcastle Othello passage Philip Massinger phrase play Players Playes Poems poet praiſe prefixed Prince printed Quarto Queen quoted reference Reprinted Richard Richard III Romeo and Juliet ſay says scene ſee Shakespeare Shakspere Shakspere's ſhall ſhould Sir John ſome Sonnets ſpeake Stage stanza thee theſe Thomas Thomas Heywood thoſe thou Tragedy unto Venus and Adonis verses vpon whofe whoſe William words write written