| + + — | Ath. 1905, 1: 602. My. 13. 2270w. |
“But there can be no doubt as to the gratitude which every student who has been puzzled by these familiar problems must feel to Professor Bradley for the help afforded by his careful and sympathetic volume.” R. W. Chambers.
| + + + | Hibbert J. 4: 213. O. ‘05. 1630w. |
“Is an excellent example of sedate English critical scholarship.”
| + + | Ind. 58: 839. Ap. 13, ‘05. 440w. |
[*] “It is the best piece of Shakespearean criticism published for some time.”
| + + + | Ind. 59: 1163. N. 16, ‘05. 110w. |
“The book is worthy of its theme; and it will carry the reader deeper into the mind of Shakespeare—deeper, I believe, than of any other commentator.” Henry Jones.
| + + + | Int. J. Ethics. 16: 99. O. ‘05. 2920w. |
“A great mass of erudition, thoroughly digested, reasoned, and ordered, is brought to bear not merely on the four tragedies professedly dealt with, but incidentally on the other plays as well; the ideas are expressed in a style always admirably clear and often of a finely restrained eloquence.”