Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
A Brief Enquiry Into The Learning Of Shakspeare.
Because , in choice he is so oft beguil'd . As waggish boys , themselves in game forswear , So the boy lew is peijur'd every where . ' Shakspeare had this picture from FR 0 PERT 1 US , LIB . 17 . Quicunque ille fuit qui inxit amoremj
' puerum p Nonne putas miras hunc habuisse manus \ Hie primiim vidit sine sensu vivere amantcs , Etlevibus cuiis magna perirebona . , Idem non fmstra ventosas addidit alas , Fecit et humano corde volare deum . Scilicet alterna qnGniam jaftamur in unda , Nostraque non uliis permantt aura locis .
Et merito hamatis nanus est armata sagittis , Et pharetra ex humero Gnossia utroque jacet , Ante ferit quoniam , tuti qiiam cernimus hostem , Nee quisquam ex illo vulneve sanus abit . ' MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING , ACT IV . . . « It so falls out ,
That which we have , we prize not to the worth While we enjoy it , but being lack'd and lost , Why then we rack the value ; then we find The virtue that possession would not shew us , While it was ours . ' Exactly from
HORACE , CARM . LIB . III . ODE X < K ' Heu I nefas ! Virtutem incolumen odimus Sublatam ex oculis qurcrimus invidi . '
T 1 MON O ? ATHENS , ACT IV . r ¦ I'll example you with thievery . The sun ' s a thief , and with his great attraction Robs the vast sea . The moon ' s an arrant thief . And her pale fire she snatches from the sun The sea ' s a thief , whose liquid surge resolves _ The mounds into salt tears . The earth's a thief . stole
That feeds and breeds by a composture n From general excrements ' . A very remarkable parody from ANACREON , ODE XIX . ., 'H y > fxiXaita ¦ ame * HiiJi SE Styj ji avrett '
IIivii SaAao-o-a Vav ^ ae , " 0 5 ' r , X or SaAaiTffa / . To » SSI / SIM j « A »>» , TJ fto » ^ a ^ iuO' « T 3-t ; o * K a'JTU ff ^ OVTJ TtUci . ¦ In the Second Part of HENRY the VithAct iv . Scene i . Shakspeare
, quotes a Latin poet , in the character of Suffolk ; and in Act . v . Scene i . in the same play , he alludes to the AI « J Macltyc ^ os of Sophocles . « And now , like Ajax Telamonins , On sheep and oxen could I spend my fury , ' Sec ,
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.
A Brief Enquiry Into The Learning Of Shakspeare.
Because , in choice he is so oft beguil'd . As waggish boys , themselves in game forswear , So the boy lew is peijur'd every where . ' Shakspeare had this picture from FR 0 PERT 1 US , LIB . 17 . Quicunque ille fuit qui inxit amoremj
' puerum p Nonne putas miras hunc habuisse manus \ Hie primiim vidit sine sensu vivere amantcs , Etlevibus cuiis magna perirebona . , Idem non fmstra ventosas addidit alas , Fecit et humano corde volare deum . Scilicet alterna qnGniam jaftamur in unda , Nostraque non uliis permantt aura locis .
Et merito hamatis nanus est armata sagittis , Et pharetra ex humero Gnossia utroque jacet , Ante ferit quoniam , tuti qiiam cernimus hostem , Nee quisquam ex illo vulneve sanus abit . ' MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING , ACT IV . . . « It so falls out ,
That which we have , we prize not to the worth While we enjoy it , but being lack'd and lost , Why then we rack the value ; then we find The virtue that possession would not shew us , While it was ours . ' Exactly from
HORACE , CARM . LIB . III . ODE X < K ' Heu I nefas ! Virtutem incolumen odimus Sublatam ex oculis qurcrimus invidi . '
T 1 MON O ? ATHENS , ACT IV . r ¦ I'll example you with thievery . The sun ' s a thief , and with his great attraction Robs the vast sea . The moon ' s an arrant thief . And her pale fire she snatches from the sun The sea ' s a thief , whose liquid surge resolves _ The mounds into salt tears . The earth's a thief . stole
That feeds and breeds by a composture n From general excrements ' . A very remarkable parody from ANACREON , ODE XIX . ., 'H y > fxiXaita ¦ ame * HiiJi SE Styj ji avrett '
IIivii SaAao-o-a Vav ^ ae , " 0 5 ' r , X or SaAaiTffa / . To » SSI / SIM j « A »>» , TJ fto » ^ a ^ iuO' « T 3-t ; o * K a'JTU ff ^ OVTJ TtUci . ¦ In the Second Part of HENRY the VithAct iv . Scene i . Shakspeare
, quotes a Latin poet , in the character of Suffolk ; and in Act . v . Scene i . in the same play , he alludes to the AI « J Macltyc ^ os of Sophocles . « And now , like Ajax Telamonins , On sheep and oxen could I spend my fury , ' Sec ,