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...date of the play is doubtful, it is known to have been first acted in 1608 at the Globe Theatre in London by His Majesty's Servants and was first coupled with the name of Shakespere in 1653, when it was entered in the Stationers' Register by H. Moseley. Tieck and two other German critics attribute the play to Shakespere: Charles Lamb claims that it was undoubtedly written by Michael Drayton; while Hazlitt and Ulrici unite on Thomas Heywood...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Arrangements for Annual D. U. Play | 1/10/1910 | See Source »

...given by Professor James; and Hygiene 10, a half course on general hygiene to be given by Assistant Professor Fitz. In place of his half course on the Social and Political Tendencies in German Literature, Professor Francke is to give two half courses, on the German Romantic Movement from Tieck to Heine, and on the German Drama since 1848. Philosophy I is to be given in the future as two whole courses. One will be Philosophy 1a, Logic, the first half-year, by Professor Palmer; Psychology, the second half-year, by Professor Munsterberg. The other will be Philosophy 1b, History...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Courses for 1897-98. | 4/29/1897 | See Source »

...almost the merit of original works, like Sir Thomas Urquhart's of Rabelais, for instance, but it is almost impossible that any foreigner should acquire that perfect intimacy with the niceties of a language which is essential to the thorough comprehension of an author and especially a poet. Both Tieck and Schlegal have mined very deep in the genius of Shakespeare, of his power and art they were among the first to form an adequate conception, and yet in their translation, where Macbeth says: "Here on this bank and shoal of Time," they give us instead: "Here on this bench...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Fragments from the Lectures of Professor Lowell. | 3/30/1894 | See Source »

...ferment for young men who thought themselves endowed with genius, and influenced German thought from that day to this. But in a narrower sense, the name of Romantic School is applied only to a group of young men, born between 1765 and 1775, notably the brothers Schlegel, Tieck, Noualis, Schelling and Schleiermacher...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Professor Royce's Lecture. | 11/6/1890 | See Source »

Born: Herder, 1744; Goethe, 1749; Schiller, 1759; Fichte, 1762; A. W. Schlegel, 1767; Schleiermacher, 1768; Hegel, 1770; Friedrich Schlegel, 1772; Novalis, 1772; Tieck, 1773; Schelling, 1775; Schopenbauer, 1788; Woldsworth, 1770; Scott, 1771; Coleridge, 1772; Southey, 1774; Byron, 1788; Shelley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Course on Modern Thinkers. | 11/5/1890 | See Source »

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