The Plays of William Shakspeare: With the Corrections and Illustrations of Various Commentators, to which are Added Notes, Volumen17J. Johnson, 1803 |
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Página 6
... paffage fomething feems to be wanting . The bellow's and fan being commonly used for contrary purposes , were probably oppofed by the author , who might perhaps have written : is become the bellows , and the fan , To kindle and to cool ...
... paffage fomething feems to be wanting . The bellow's and fan being commonly used for contrary purposes , were probably oppofed by the author , who might perhaps have written : is become the bellows , and the fan , To kindle and to cool ...
Página 10
... paffage , feems to have the old Saxon fignification of without , unless , except . Antony , fays the queen , will recollect his thoughts . Unless kept , he replies , in commotion by Cleopatra . JOHNSON . What could Cleopatra mean by ...
... paffage , feems to have the old Saxon fignification of without , unless , except . Antony , fays the queen , will recollect his thoughts . Unless kept , he replies , in commotion by Cleopatra . JOHNSON . What could Cleopatra mean by ...
Página 25
... paffage is : " When our pregnant minds lie idle and untilled , they bring forth weeds ; but the telling us of our faults is a kind of culture to them . " The pro- noun our before quick , fhows that the substantive to which it refers ...
... paffage is : " When our pregnant minds lie idle and untilled , they bring forth weeds ; but the telling us of our faults is a kind of culture to them . " The pro- noun our before quick , fhows that the substantive to which it refers ...
Página 27
... paffage . The explanation which Dr. War- burton has offered is fuch , that I can add nothing to it ; yet , perhaps , Shakspeare , who was less learned than his commen- tator , meant only , that our pleasures , as they are revolved in ...
... paffage . The explanation which Dr. War- burton has offered is fuch , that I can add nothing to it ; yet , perhaps , Shakspeare , who was less learned than his commen- tator , meant only , that our pleasures , as they are revolved in ...
Página 29
... paffage to be corrupt , because the diction is different from that of the prefent day . The arrangement of the text was the phrafeology of Shakspeare , and probably of his time . So , in King Henry VIII : 6.6 -You must be well contented ...
... paffage to be corrupt , because the diction is different from that of the prefent day . The arrangement of the text was the phrafeology of Shakspeare , and probably of his time . So , in King Henry VIII : 6.6 -You must be well contented ...
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