Page:The Age of Shakespeare - Swinburne (1908).djvu/303

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286
THE AGE OF SHAKESPEARE

keenest insight and the sublimest impulse that can guide the perception and animate the expression of a poet whose line of work is naturally confined to the limits of moral or ethical tragedy—if all these qualities may be admitted to confer a right to remembrance and a claim to regard, there can be no fear and no danger of forgetfulness for the name of Cyril Tourneur.

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