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 xxiv
... appears to be that the cause of this neglect of Antony is the secret of the Elizabethan attitude towards Shakspere the dramatist . It was not necessarily the finest poetry , nor the highest delineation of character , nor evidence of the ...
... appears to be that the cause of this neglect of Antony is the secret of the Elizabethan attitude towards Shakspere the dramatist . It was not necessarily the finest poetry , nor the highest delineation of character , nor evidence of the ...
Page xxxviii
... appear again in Armin's Historie of the two Maids of More - Clacke , 1608— “ courtly dames or earth's bright treading starres " ; and in Fletcher's Noble Gentleman , 3 " Beauties , that lights the Court , and makes it shew Like a faire ...
... appear again in Armin's Historie of the two Maids of More - Clacke , 1608— “ courtly dames or earth's bright treading starres " ; and in Fletcher's Noble Gentleman , 3 " Beauties , that lights the Court , and makes it shew Like a faire ...
Page xxxix
... appear in Webster's White Devil and Suckling's Goblins . " Of the words of Falstaff and his kinsmen rascals there are many echoes . We have previously noticed Ancient Pistol as a purveyor of play - scraps . The earliest reproduction of ...
... appear in Webster's White Devil and Suckling's Goblins . " Of the words of Falstaff and his kinsmen rascals there are many echoes . We have previously noticed Ancient Pistol as a purveyor of play - scraps . The earliest reproduction of ...
Page xlv
... appear to be due to book knowledge , but are simply the repetition of phrases and passages caught by the ear , with such misplacement of words and minor errors as such a process would entail . In an age when many playwrights were actors ...
... appear to be due to book knowledge , but are simply the repetition of phrases and passages caught by the ear , with such misplacement of words and minor errors as such a process would entail . In an age when many playwrights were actors ...
Page liii
... appears to me to have made perfect Representations of Humane Life most other Authors , that I ever read , either have wilde Romantick Tales , wherein they strein Love and Honour to that Ridiculous height , that it become Burlesque ...
... appears to me to have made perfect Representations of Humane Life most other Authors , that I ever read , either have wilde Romantick Tales , wherein they strein Love and Honour to that Ridiculous height , that it become Burlesque ...
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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