Biographical Essays and Essays on the PoetsOsgood, 1875 |
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Page 22
... object . Such , probably , was Milton's state of feeling towards Shakspeare after 1642 , when the theatres were suppressed , and the fanatical fervor in its noontide heat . Yet even then he did not belie his reverence intellectually for ...
... object . Such , probably , was Milton's state of feeling towards Shakspeare after 1642 , when the theatres were suppressed , and the fanatical fervor in its noontide heat . Yet even then he did not belie his reverence intellectually for ...
Page 36
... objects to Malone's principle of valua- tion . " We find , ' says he , that John Shakspeare also farmed the meadow of Tugton , containing sixteen acres , at the rate of eleven shillings per acre . Now what proof has Mr. Malone adduced ...
... objects to Malone's principle of valua- tion . " We find , ' says he , that John Shakspeare also farmed the meadow of Tugton , containing sixteen acres , at the rate of eleven shillings per acre . Now what proof has Mr. Malone adduced ...
Page 44
... object of our worship , has no interest of glory , we proceed to state what appears to us the re- sult of the scanty facts surviving when collated with each other . By his mother's side , Shakspeare was an authentic gentleman . By his ...
... object of our worship , has no interest of glory , we proceed to state what appears to us the re- sult of the scanty facts surviving when collated with each other . By his mother's side , Shakspeare was an authentic gentleman . By his ...
Page 46
... object as any woman of any station . Hence we may in part account for the great event of Shakspeare's early manhood , his premature marriage . It has always been known , or at least traditionally received for a fact , that Shakspeare ...
... object as any woman of any station . Hence we may in part account for the great event of Shakspeare's early manhood , his premature marriage . It has always been known , or at least traditionally received for a fact , that Shakspeare ...
Page 62
... object ; and , after all , the ridicule itself lies in a Welshman's mis- pronouncing one single heraldic term -a ... objects that the costs of advertising , and the reward , would eat out the full value of the silk stock- ings . But to ...
... object ; and , after all , the ridicule itself lies in a Welshman's mis- pronouncing one single heraldic term -a ... objects that the costs of advertising , and the reward , would eat out the full value of the silk stock- ings . But to ...
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absolute accident Addison admiration Alexander Pope amongst Anne Hathaway beauty Caleb Williams called century character Charles Lamb Christian circumstances connected Count Julian critics death Dryden Duke Dunciad effect England English expression fact father feeling Frankfort French French Revolution genius German Gilfillan Goethe Goldsmith's grandeur Grasmere Greek Hazlitt heart honor human idolatry Iliad instance intellectual interest Joseph Warton labor Lamb Lamb's Landor language less literary literature Lord Lord Harvey Lucretius marriage Mary Arden means ment Milton mind misanthropy mode moral nature never NOTE notice object once original passion perhaps philosophic poem poet poetry Pope Pope's popular prince rank reader reason regard satiric Schiller seems sense Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shelley Shelley's social solemn speak spirit Stratford suffered supposed things thought tion true truth utter whilst whole word Wordsworth writing young