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Page 4
... beauty in the most exalted, combined with the ordinary sense, — meaning, in short, exquisitely graceful, beautiful, and sweet. The analogy will at once be seen which the image of the graceful rose bears to the exquisite spirit of ...
... beauty in the most exalted, combined with the ordinary sense, — meaning, in short, exquisitely graceful, beautiful, and sweet. The analogy will at once be seen which the image of the graceful rose bears to the exquisite spirit of ...
Page 13
... beauty here. The word ' boy ' naturally provokes and awakens in Orlando the sense of his manly powers ; and with the retort of ' elder brother,' he grasps him with firm hands and makes him feel he is no boy. 54. Staunton : The obscurity ...
... beauty here. The word ' boy ' naturally provokes and awakens in Orlando the sense of his manly powers ; and with the retort of ' elder brother,' he grasps him with firm hands and makes him feel he is no boy. 54. Staunton : The obscurity ...
Page 17
... beauty of his exquisite As You Like It without having loitered, as I have done, amidst its tangled glens and magnificent depths.' We must venture to think it was not necessary for Shakespeare to visit Ardennes to have described 'An old ...
... beauty of his exquisite As You Like It without having loitered, as I have done, amidst its tangled glens and magnificent depths.' We must venture to think it was not necessary for Shakespeare to visit Ardennes to have described 'An old ...
Page 21
... beauty, as has so often happened to me with other supposed defects of great men. — 1810. It is too venturous to charge a passage in Shakespeare with want of truth to Nature; and "yet at first sight this speech of Oliver's expresses ...
... beauty, as has so often happened to me with other supposed defects of great men. — 1810. It is too venturous to charge a passage in Shakespeare with want of truth to Nature; and "yet at first sight this speech of Oliver's expresses ...
Page 22
... beauty whatever it shines on! Blackwood's Magazine (April, 1833, p. 547. Qu. Thomas Campbell ?) : But lo ! One more delightful, more alluring, more fascinating, more enchanting, more captivating than Beatrice! In pure nature and sweet ...
... beauty whatever it shines on! Blackwood's Magazine (April, 1833, p. 547. Qu. Thomas Campbell ?) : But lo ! One more delightful, more alluring, more fascinating, more enchanting, more captivating than Beatrice! In pure nature and sweet ...
Common terms and phrases
Abbott Adam affection Aliena appears bear beauty better brother called Celia character Coll court doubt Duke Dyce edition Enter expression eyes faire fancie father fear feel felfe Folio fool forest fortune fuch Ganimede given gives hand hath haue heart hope instances Jaques Johns Johnson kind living looke Lord loue Malone meaning merely mind Montanus nature never once original Orlando passage perhaps phrase play poore Pope present printed probably quoth refers Rosader Rosalind Rowe Saladyne says scene seems sense Shakespeare song speak speech Steevens suggests tell thee thefe thing thou thought Touchstone tree true turn Walker White whole woman Wright