Shakespeare and the Modern Stage: With Other EssaysConstable, 1906 - 251 Seiten |
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Seite 19
... human society -but to the superior imaginative faculty of adult Elizabethan or Jacobean playgoers , in whom , as in Garrick's time , the needful dramatic illusion was far more easily evoked than it is nowadays . This is no exhilarating ...
... human society -but to the superior imaginative faculty of adult Elizabethan or Jacobean playgoers , in whom , as in Garrick's time , the needful dramatic illusion was far more easily evoked than it is nowadays . This is no exhilarating ...
Seite 27
... human pen or brain is more closely packed with fruit of the imaginative study of human life than is Shakespeare's tragedy of Hamlet ; and while the author acted the part of the Ghost in the play's initial representation in the theatre ...
... human pen or brain is more closely packed with fruit of the imaginative study of human life than is Shakespeare's tragedy of Hamlet ; and while the author acted the part of the Ghost in the play's initial representation in the theatre ...
Seite 30
... human nature that literature had known , and , as subsequent ex- perience has proved , was likely to know . There is evidence that throughout his lifetime and for a generation afterwards his plays drew crowds to pit , boxes , and ...
... human nature that literature had known , and , as subsequent ex- perience has proved , was likely to know . There is evidence that throughout his lifetime and for a generation afterwards his plays drew crowds to pit , boxes , and ...
Seite 32
... human feeling , which were to inspire Titanic achievements in the future . Soon after , Shakespeare scaled the tragic heights of Romeo and Juliet , and he was hailed as the prophet of a new world of art . Fashionable London society then ...
... human feeling , which were to inspire Titanic achievements in the future . Soon after , Shakespeare scaled the tragic heights of Romeo and Juliet , and he was hailed as the prophet of a new world of art . Fashionable London society then ...
Seite 36
... human faculty , still , from some points of view , there is ground for surprise that the Elizabethan playgoer's enthusiasm for Shakespeare's work was so marked and unequivocal as we know that it was . Let us consider for a moment the ...
... human faculty , still , from some points of view , there is ground for surprise that the Elizabethan playgoer's enthusiasm for Shakespeare's work was so marked and unequivocal as we know that it was . Let us consider for a moment the ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acting actor actor-manager actors and actresses artistic audience Bacon Beeston Ben Jonson Benson's Betterton biography Cæsar career character Charles Charles Kean comedy commemorative contemporary criticism Cymbeline D'Avenant D'Avenant's death dramatic art dramatist Drury Lane Elizabethan endeavour England English experience France French genius gossip Hamlet Henry histrionic honour human imagination Jonson Julius Cæsar King less lips literary drama literature London London County Council Lowin Macbeth manager memorial ment methods monument moral municipal theatre nation natural never Nicholas Rowe oral tradition Othello patriotic instinct Pepys's performance Phelps Phelps's philosophy piece playgoer playhouse plays of Shakespeare poet poetic present produced realise rendered Richard II rôles scene scenery scenic sentiment seventeenth century Shake Shakespeare's plays Shakespearean drama Sir Henry Irving speare speare's spearean spectacular speech Stratford Stratford-on-Avon Tempest theatrical enterprise thou tion tragedy Twelfth Night virtue William Beeston William D'Avenant writing wrote