·good Exercise &c. In the middle ages shoir Education of princes & noble you'ther, consistic in martial exercises, &c. the fe could not be had in a prison; where mental Improvements might? have been affordér as well where else: but this fort of Education pour entered into the. thoughts of our active. warlike, but illiterates nobility. (Sec Robertson's Hist of Charles V. st. Vol. 1. Note 26. S. 1. p. 69. pag. 319.) I know. not whether Shakespeare be supposed to have had this propriety Vo Strictly in view: but Dear of the same kind wire hardly out in his time; he has therefore made Pembroke speak more characteristically perhapes than he was annie of. PLAYS O F WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE VOLUME the THIRD, CONTAINING, The TAMING of the SHREW. The COMEDY of ERRORS. MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING. ALL'S WELL, THAT ENDS WELL. LONDON: Printed for J. and R. TONSON, C. CORBET, H. WOODFALL, M,DCC,LXV. |