Оглавление
- PREFACE TO SHAKESPEARE
- SELECTED NOTES FROM SOME OF THE PLAYS
- MEASURE FOR MEASURE
- ACT I. SCENE i. (I. i. 7-9.)
- ACT I. SCENE ii. (I. i. 51.)
- ACT II. SCENE ix. (II. iii. 11-12.)
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 13-15.)
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 16-17.)
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 32-4.)
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 36-8.)
- ACT III. SCENE ii. (III. i. 137-8.)
- ACT IV. SCENE viii. (iv. iii. 4-5.)
- ACT IV. SCENE xiii. (IV. V. 1.)
- ACT V. SCENE vii. (V. i. 448.)
- ACT V. SCENE viii. (v. i. 479 foll.)
- HENRY IV
- HENRY V
- ACT. II. SCENE iv. (II. iii. 27-8.)
- KING LEAR
- ROMEO AND JULIET
- ACT I. SCENE ii. (I. i. 181 foll.)
- ACT I. SCENE iii. (I. ii. 25.)
- ACT I. SCENE iii. (I. ii. 26-8.)
- ACT I. SCENE iv. (l. iii. 92.)
- ACT I. SCENE vi. (1. v. 34.)
- ACT I. CHORUS. (II. PROLOGUE.)
- ACT II. SCENE vi. (ii. vi. 15.)
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 2.)
- ACT III. SCENE iii. (III. i. 183.)
- ACT III. SCENE viii. (III. v. 84.)
- ACT IV. SCENE iii. (IV. iii. 2-3.)
- ACT V. SCENE i. (V. i. 3.)
- ACT V. SCENE v. (v. iii. 229.)
- HAMLET
- ACT II. SCENE ii. (II. i. 114-17.)
- ACT II. SCENE iv. (II. ii.)
- OTHELLO
- ACT V. SCENE vi. (v. ii. 63-5.)
- Главная
- Samuel Johnson
- 📚 Книги
- Preface to Shakespeare
- Читать онлайн
- ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 36-8.)ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 36-8.)
ACT III. SCENE i. (III. i. 36-8.)
But how does beauty make "riches pleasant"? We should read "bounty", which compleats the sense, and is this; Thou hast neither the pleasure of enjoying riches thy self, for thou wantest vigour: nor of seeing it enjoyed by others, for thou wantest "bounty". Where the making the want of "bounty" as inseparable from old age as the want of "health", is extremely satyrical tho' not altogether just. —Warburton.
I am inclined to believe that neither man nor woman will have much difficulty to tell how "beauty makes riches pleasant". Surely this emendation, though it is elegant and ingenious, is not such as that an opportunity of inserting it should be purchased by declaring ignorance of what every one knows, by confessing insensibility of what every one feels.