The Works of Shakespeare ..., Volume 1 |
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Pagina x
to by mere recollections of delight ; . . . the poet may have left the manuscript in a more unfinished and illegible state , from a sense of something ungenial and unattractive in the subject - matter and action of the play .
to by mere recollections of delight ; . . . the poet may have left the manuscript in a more unfinished and illegible state , from a sense of something ungenial and unattractive in the subject - matter and action of the play .
Pagina xi
This is not the place to discuss the several claims of these three plays : the battle has been fought out , and critics are now almost unanimous in declar- ing that All's Well that Ends Well is , in all probability , the play that Meres ...
This is not the place to discuss the several claims of these three plays : the battle has been fought out , and critics are now almost unanimous in declar- ing that All's Well that Ends Well is , in all probability , the play that Meres ...
Pagina xv
distinct styles , the one reminding one of the earliest plays , the other of the great plays of the period of tragedy ; that the fourfold recurrence of the proverb " All's well that ends well " in the text of the play , and the apparent ...
distinct styles , the one reminding one of the earliest plays , the other of the great plays of the period of tragedy ; that the fourfold recurrence of the proverb " All's well that ends well " in the text of the play , and the apparent ...
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