The Complete Works of William Hazlitt, Volume 6J. M. Dent and Sons, Limited, 1931 |
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Page 36
... become the fashion , and in which the swarms of egregious pretenders in both kinds openly kept one another in countenance , and were become a public nuisance . Shakspeare , living in a state of greater rudeness and simplicity , chiefly ...
... become the fashion , and in which the swarms of egregious pretenders in both kinds openly kept one another in countenance , and were become a public nuisance . Shakspeare , living in a state of greater rudeness and simplicity , chiefly ...
Page 236
... become of it , I neither know nor care . Hip . Then can I tell you what's become of it : that branch is wither'd . Orl . So ' twas long ago . Hip . Her name , I think , was Bellafront ; she's dead . Orl . Ha ! dead ? Hip . Yes , what of ...
... become of it , I neither know nor care . Hip . Then can I tell you what's become of it : that branch is wither'd . Orl . So ' twas long ago . Hip . Her name , I think , was Bellafront ; she's dead . Orl . Ha ! dead ? Hip . Yes , what of ...
Page 331
... become septuagenary , or whether the law Papia made against old men's marriages had restrained them . So it seemeth men doubt , lest time was become past children and generation : wherein contrary - wise , we see commonly the levity and ...
... become septuagenary , or whether the law Papia made against old men's marriages had restrained them . So it seemeth men doubt , lest time was become past children and generation : wherein contrary - wise , we see commonly the levity and ...
Contents
LECTURE I | 5 |
LECTURE II | 30 |
On Cowley Butler Suckling Etherege | 70 |
Copyright | |
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