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 MatthewJohn Rusell Smith, 1857 |
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الصفحة 56
... Common Council was not so rigidly enforced as in others . Certain , however , it is , that the City , as a body , were sadly * Or , as we should now say , real names . inimical to the poor players , and no theatre , 56 PLAYERS .
... Common Council was not so rigidly enforced as in others . Certain , however , it is , that the City , as a body , were sadly * Or , as we should now say , real names . inimical to the poor players , and no theatre , 56 PLAYERS .
الصفحة 57
... common people had access . The word education , * in Bacon's time , was almost exclusively used in relation to the body ; learning was the word used to denote mental culture . The policy of the times of Elizabeth was to educate or train ...
... common people had access . The word education , * in Bacon's time , was almost exclusively used in relation to the body ; learning was the word used to denote mental culture . The policy of the times of Elizabeth was to educate or train ...
الصفحة 71
... common people standing here to see the performances are therefore called in Hamlet , " groundlings " a term repeated by Decker , who speaks of " the groundling and gallery commoner buying his sport by the penny . " The pit was separated ...
... common people standing here to see the performances are therefore called in Hamlet , " groundlings " a term repeated by Decker , who speaks of " the groundling and gallery commoner buying his sport by the penny . " The pit was separated ...
الصفحة 75
... common plaies , " being ac- cessible to every one who could command the small sum charged for admission , were resorted to by the very lowest of the people . We say the " common plaies " ; for discarding Mr. Collier's distinction of ...
... common plaies , " being ac- cessible to every one who could command the small sum charged for admission , were resorted to by the very lowest of the people . We say the " common plaies " ; for discarding Mr. Collier's distinction of ...
الصفحة 78
... common plaies " at Shakespeare's own theatre , is very possible ; but if they were , they were doubt- less altered , mutilated , and interpolated , to suit the taste of that wretched audience . E CHAPTER X. PLAY - WRITERS . We have seen ...
... common plaies " at Shakespeare's own theatre , is very possible ; but if they were , they were doubt- less altered , mutilated , and interpolated , to suit the taste of that wretched audience . E CHAPTER X. PLAY - WRITERS . We have seen ...
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