The Shakspere Allusion-book: A Collection of Allusions to Shakspere from 1591 to 1700, Volume 1John James Munro Chatto & Windus, 1909 |
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Page xi
... Elizabethan and Victorian times ; yet intellectually , the two eras are widely different . In the latter , together with other causes , the manipulation of natural forces in industrial development and the perfection of locomotion ...
... Elizabethan and Victorian times ; yet intellectually , the two eras are widely different . In the latter , together with other causes , the manipulation of natural forces in industrial development and the perfection of locomotion ...
Page xiv
... Elizabethan , the muse shed not one tear . It is particularly important to remember that , of all the poets who had sung the praises of Shakspere , and of all those who had plagiarised his works , not one was moved by his death , which ...
... Elizabethan , the muse shed not one tear . It is particularly important to remember that , of all the poets who had sung the praises of Shakspere , and of all those who had plagiarised his works , not one was moved by his death , which ...
Page xix
... Elizabethans ran , through excess of feeling over judgment , into hyperbole , just as their satire and criticism , for the same reason , were apt to be too severe . In an age when the encomiastic address of patrons was all but ...
... Elizabethans ran , through excess of feeling over judgment , into hyperbole , just as their satire and criticism , for the same reason , were apt to be too severe . In an age when the encomiastic address of patrons was all but ...
Page xx
... Elizabethans Shakspere was an Elizabethan , not the great heir of universal fame . It was yet too early in that busy world with its strong social distinctions , for men to realise that one who followed the more or less despised vocation ...
... Elizabethans Shakspere was an Elizabethan , not the great heir of universal fame . It was yet too early in that busy world with its strong social distinctions , for men to realise that one who followed the more or less despised vocation ...
Page xxi
... Elizabethan , Spenser was a greater poet than Shakspere ; though he , too , came under the censure of criticism for his use of “ rustic language . " Camden in 1606 described Spenser as first of English poets of that time ( Anglorum ...
... Elizabethan , Spenser was a greater poet than Shakspere ; though he , too , came under the censure of criticism for his use of “ rustic language . " Camden in 1606 described Spenser as first of English poets of that time ( Anglorum ...
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Common terms and phrases
A. B. Grosart 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 honour 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 pleaſe Poems poet praiſe prefixed Prince printed Quarto Queen quoted reference Reprinted Richard Richard III Romeo and Juliet says scene Shakespeare Shakspere Shakspere's ſhall ſhould Sir John Sonnets Stage stanza thee theſe Thomas Thomas Heywood thoſe thou Tragedy unto Venus and Adonis verses vpon whofe whoſe William William Shakespeare words write written