All these are transition-works, Uebergangswerke ; not his, yet of him. Second Epoch. worked up afresh, (umgearbeitet) especially Parolles. Third Epoch rises into the full, although youthful, Shakspeare ; it was the negative period of his perfection. Love's Labour's Lost. Fourth Epoch. Fifth Epoch. The period of beauty was now past; and that of CELVÓrns and grandeur succeeds. Lear. Hamlet. Ironie. . Taming of the Shrew. Measure for Measure. Othello. Tempest. ll'inter's Tale. Cymbeline. }umgearbeitet. CLASSIFICATION ATTEMPTED, 1810. Love's Labour's Lost. Romeo and Juliet. Midsummer Night's Dream. Twelfth Night. merely of poetry, but—of all the world of thought, yet still with some of the growing pains, and the awkwardness of growth, I place I Taming of the Shrew. In the fourth, I place the plays containing the greatest characters; Macbeth. Othello. And lastly, the historic dramas, in order to be able to show my reasons for rejecting some whole plays, and very many scenes in others. CLASSIFICATION ATTEMPTED, 1819. I think Shakspeare's earliest dramatic attempt perhaps even prior in conception to the Venus and Adonis, and planned before he left Stratford—was Love's Labour's Lost. Shortly afterwards I suppose Pericles and certain scenes in Jeronymo to have been produced; and in the same epoch, I place the Winter's Tale and Cymbeline, differing from the Pericles by the entire rifacimento of it, when Shakspeare's celebrity as poet, and his interest, سه ر ( no less than his influence as manager, enabled him Second Epoch. Third Epoch. Henry IV. show play. Fourth Epoch gives all the graces and facilities of a genius in full possession and habitual exercise of power, and peculiarly of the feminine, the lady's character. Tempest. Twelfth Night. Lear. Last Epoch, when the energies of intellect in the cycle of genius were, though in a rich and more potentiated form, becoming predominant over passion and creative self-manifestation. Measure for Veasure. Troilus and Cressida. Merciful, wonder-making Heaven! what a man was this Shakspeare! Myriad-minded, indeed, he was. |