Bacon and Shakespeare. An Inquiry Touching Players Playhouses, and Play-writers in the Days of Elizabeth. To which is Appended an Abstract of a Ms. Respecting Tobie Matthew |
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الصفحة 7
This is perfectly amazing from a man of no education or experience in those great
and public scenes of life which are usually the subject of his thoughts . So that he
seems to have known the world by intuition , to have looked through human ...
This is perfectly amazing from a man of no education or experience in those great
and public scenes of life which are usually the subject of his thoughts . So that he
seems to have known the world by intuition , to have looked through human ...
الصفحة 31
... when thy Sockes were on , Leave thee alone , for the comparison Of all , that
insolent Greece , or haughtie Rome Sent forth , or since did from their ashes
come . Triumph , my Britaine , thou hast one to showe , To whom all Scenes of
Europe ...
... when thy Sockes were on , Leave thee alone , for the comparison Of all , that
insolent Greece , or haughtie Rome Sent forth , or since did from their ashes
come . Triumph , my Britaine , thou hast one to showe , To whom all Scenes of
Europe ...
الصفحة 72
The locality of the scene was indicated by a written paper placed at the back of
the stage ; the imagination of the audience supplied the rest . Sir Philip Sydney ,
describing the state of the drama and the stage in his time , about 1583 , says : _
...
The locality of the scene was indicated by a written paper placed at the back of
the stage ; the imagination of the audience supplied the rest . Sir Philip Sydney ,
describing the state of the drama and the stage in his time , about 1583 , says : _
...
الصفحة 73
For by sitting on the stage , ” says he , " you have a signed patent to engross the
whole commodity of censure ; may lawfully presume to be a girder , and stand at
the helm and steer the passage of scenes . ” He enumerates other advantages ...
For by sitting on the stage , ” says he , " you have a signed patent to engross the
whole commodity of censure ; may lawfully presume to be a girder , and stand at
the helm and steer the passage of scenes . ” He enumerates other advantages ...
الصفحة 128
Full oft ' tis seene * Theobald says this sentiment is so much akin to a passage in
Ovid , that it seems to be taken directly from it :Fortuna miserrima tula est Nam
timor eventûs deterioris abest . Epist . ii , lib . 2 , ex Ponto . 129 Act IV . Scene 1 .
Full oft ' tis seene * Theobald says this sentiment is so much akin to a passage in
Ovid , that it seems to be taken directly from it :Fortuna miserrima tula est Nam
timor eventûs deterioris abest . Epist . ii , lib . 2 , ex Ponto . 129 Act IV . Scene 1 .
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actors admitted appear Bacon became believe called CHAPTER character City common considered court death doubt drama editions Elizabeth Enter evidence excellence expression eyes fact fancy father folio give hath Henry honour hope ignorant Italy James Jonson King knowledge known Latin learning less letter lines living London Lord manners matter means mind Nahum nature never noble object observes obtained passage passed performed period persons players playhouse plays poet poetry poor possessed praise present probably produced professed prove published Queen reader reason respectable says scene seems Shakespeare sort speak stage taken Tate theatre thee thing thou thought Tobie Matthew true truth William Shakespeare writes written wrote