Abstract
“SHAKESPEARE'S England” is a very remarkable book, and a credit to our time. It could have been produced in no other. Indeed, it could only have been produced within the last few years, so much is it the outcome of the research in ever so many directions which has been going on of late. It is sad, of course, that it should make its appearance in the middle of the great war, and yet there is something fine and fitting about this. It does not to-day jostle with a motley crowd of ephemeral, flimsy, and flashy tributes. And it has a solemn majesty and solidity which make it worth while, even at such a time, and in virtue of which it will survive even these heavy troubles.
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WARREN, H. Shakespeare's England 1 . Nature 98, 491–493 (1917). https://doi.org/10.1038/098491b0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/098491b0