The Works of Shakespear, Volume 1Printed at the Theatre, 1744 |
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Page xxx
... She was fo well pleas'd with that admirable character of Falstaff , in the two parts of Henry the fourth , that she commanded him to continue it for one Play more , and to fhew him in love . This is faid to be the occafion of his ...
... She was fo well pleas'd with that admirable character of Falstaff , in the two parts of Henry the fourth , that she commanded him to continue it for one Play more , and to fhew him in love . This is faid to be the occafion of his ...
Page xxxiii
... she had three Sons , who all dy'd without children ; and Sufannah , who was his fa- vourite , to Dr. John Hall , a phyfician of good reputation in that country . She left one child only , a daughter , who was marry'd first to Thomas ...
... she had three Sons , who all dy'd without children ; and Sufannah , who was his fa- vourite , to Dr. John Hall , a phyfician of good reputation in that country . She left one child only , a daughter , who was marry'd first to Thomas ...
Page xxxvii
... She She never told her love , But let concealment , of Mr. WILLIAM SHAKESPEAR . XXXVII.
... She She never told her love , But let concealment , of Mr. WILLIAM SHAKESPEAR . XXXVII.
Page xxxviii
William Shakespeare Sir Thomas Hanmer. She never told her love , But let concealment , like a worm i ' th ' bud , Feed on her damask cheek : She pin'd in thought , And fat like Patience on a monument , Smiling at Grief . What an Image is ...
William Shakespeare Sir Thomas Hanmer. She never told her love , But let concealment , like a worm i ' th ' bud , Feed on her damask cheek : She pin'd in thought , And fat like Patience on a monument , Smiling at Grief . What an Image is ...
Page xlii
... she was kill'd by her own fon ; but to represent an action of this kind on the stage , is certainly an of- fence against thofe rules of manners proper to the persons , that ought to be observ❜d there . On the contrary , let us only ...
... she was kill'd by her own fon ; but to represent an action of this kind on the stage , is certainly an of- fence against thofe rules of manners proper to the persons , that ought to be observ❜d there . On the contrary , let us only ...
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