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omen is a most _un_favourable one. If on the other hand, the plate be shattered to pieces (and the more the better), the auspices are looked upon as most happy. OXONIENSIS. * * * * * SHAKSPEARE CORRESPONDENCE. _Shakspearian Drawings._--I have very recently become possessed of some curious drawings by Hollar; those relating to Shakspeare very interesting, evidently done for one Captain John Eyre, who could himself handle the pencil well. The inscription under one is as follows, in the writing of the said J. Eyre: "Ye house in ye Clink Streete, Southwarke, now belonging to Master Ralph Hansome, and in ye which Master Shakspeare lodged in ye while he writed and played at ye Globe, and untill ye yeare 1600 it was at the time ye house of Grace Loveday. Will had ye two Rooms over against ye Doorway, as I will possibly show." Size of the drawing, 12 x 7, "W. Hollar delin., 1643." It is an exterior view, beautifully executed, showing very prominently the house and a continuation of houses, forming one side of the street. The second has the following inscription in the same hand: "Ye portraiture of ye rooms in ye which Master Will Shakspeare lodged in Clink Streete, and which is told to us to be in ye same state as when left by himself, as stated over ye door in ye room, and on the walls were many printed verses, also a portraiture of Ben Jonson with a ruff on a pannel." Size of the drawing 11-5/8 x 6-7/8, "W. Hollar delin., 1643:" shows the interior of three sides, and the floor and ceiling, with the tables, chairs, and reading-desk; an open door shows the interior of his sleeping-room, being over the entrance door porch. The third-- "Ye Globe, as to be seen before ye Fire in ye year 1615, when this place was burnt down. This old building," &c. Here follows a long interesting description. It is an exterior view; size of drawing 71/4 wide x 9-7/8 high, "W. H. 1640." The fourth shows the stage, on which are two actors: this drawing, 7-7/8 x 61/2, was done by J. Eyre, 1629, and on which he gives a curious description of his accompanying Prince Charles, &c.; at this time he belonged to the Court, as he also accompanied that prince to Spain. The fifth, done by the same hand in a _most masterly manner_, pen and ink portrait of Shakspeare, copied, as he writes, from a portrait belonging to the Earl of Essex, with intere
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