The London review, conducted by R. Cumberland, Volume 1Richard Cumberland 1809 |
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Page 19
... seems no reason why nonsense should pass current , merely be cause it glitters . That there is this genius in our contemporaries I cannot doubt , but in the fitness and capacity of those , who may be selected to pass judgment on their ...
... seems no reason why nonsense should pass current , merely be cause it glitters . That there is this genius in our contemporaries I cannot doubt , but in the fitness and capacity of those , who may be selected to pass judgment on their ...
Page 20
... seems more easy than to give promptitude and security to an intercourse between parties , who seem to have a common interest , and no real cause for disagreement . " The proprietor's object is to have a variety of dramatic novelties ...
... seems more easy than to give promptitude and security to an intercourse between parties , who seem to have a common interest , and no real cause for disagreement . " The proprietor's object is to have a variety of dramatic novelties ...
Page 26
... seems , Shakspeare has borrowed from this antient author , Sir Robert no longer confines himself to abstract . The speech of Hamlet inspires him ; and he says , " I have the more particularly " translated part of this speech , as it ...
... seems , Shakspeare has borrowed from this antient author , Sir Robert no longer confines himself to abstract . The speech of Hamlet inspires him ; and he says , " I have the more particularly " translated part of this speech , as it ...
Page 27
... some passages from Saxo " Grammaticus , to which Shakspeare seems to have been ❝ indebted ; " and adds , " They are curious , though not very " delicate but one does not quite see why that Travelling Sketches in Russia and Sweden . 27.
... some passages from Saxo " Grammaticus , to which Shakspeare seems to have been ❝ indebted ; " and adds , " They are curious , though not very " delicate but one does not quite see why that Travelling Sketches in Russia and Sweden . 27.
Page 29
... seems a palace , and every palace a city . " ( Vol . I. p . 19. ) 66 He then proceeds to give an animated and picturesque de- scription of those parts of the city most worthy notice . But there is one point in which he and Mr. Coxe are ...
... seems a palace , and every palace a city . " ( Vol . I. p . 19. ) 66 He then proceeds to give an animated and picturesque de- scription of those parts of the city most worthy notice . But there is one point in which he and Mr. Coxe are ...
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