Introduction to ShakespeareAMS Press, 1970 - 136 Seiten |
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Seite 56
... tragedies the conception of the physically horrible as an element of tragedy was imported into the early English drama , and inten- sified by the realistic tendency which the events of the time and the taste of their ruder audiences had ...
... tragedies the conception of the physically horrible as an element of tragedy was imported into the early English drama , and inten- sified by the realistic tendency which the events of the time and the taste of their ruder audiences had ...
Seite 62
... tragedy . But here he attained artistic independence only by de- grees , and at first he was manifestly in tutelage to his great predecessor Marlowe . The authorship of the first part of Henry VI . is not ascertained ; it probably ...
... tragedy . But here he attained artistic independence only by de- grees , and at first he was manifestly in tutelage to his great predecessor Marlowe . The authorship of the first part of Henry VI . is not ascertained ; it probably ...
Seite 78
... tragedy turns upon the rend- ing of the bonds between husband and wife . In King Lear ( 1605 ) the tragedy is that of violated filial ties , and of a father saved - and scarcely saved— from the despair , following upon unnatural cruelty ...
... tragedy turns upon the rend- ing of the bonds between husband and wife . In King Lear ( 1605 ) the tragedy is that of violated filial ties , and of a father saved - and scarcely saved— from the despair , following upon unnatural cruelty ...
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actor admirable appeared ardent beauty Ben Jonson Betterton Burbage century character close comedy criticism D'Avenant death despair dramatic dramatist Drury Lane Earl earlier early edition Edmund Kean Elizabethan English errors essay Falstaff father Folio Garrick genius Halliwell-Phillipps Hamlet hand heart HENRY CONDELL honour human imagination James Burbage Jonson Julius Cæsar Kean Kemble King Henry King John King Lear King Richard King Richard II later lived London Love's Labour's Lost Lucrece Malone Marlowe marriage Measure for Measure Merry Wives mirth moral noble Othello passion performance perhaps players poems poet poet's printed probably published quarto Queen reader Richard Burbage romantic Romeo and Juliet scene seems Shake Shakespeare's plays Shakespearian Shylock Sonnets speare speare's spectators spirit stage Steevens Stratford Stratford-on-Avon style Tempest theatre Timon tion Titus Andronicus tragedy tragic Troilus verse volume wife William Shakespeare Wives of Windsor writes written youth