Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 3 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 21
Seite 20
... mean rather the aesthetic criticism which , book after book , still is lengthening the librarian's entry under the letter " S. " Some of this is no doubt life - giving . One may use the term advisedly , for instance , about A. C. ...
... mean rather the aesthetic criticism which , book after book , still is lengthening the librarian's entry under the letter " S. " Some of this is no doubt life - giving . One may use the term advisedly , for instance , about A. C. ...
Seite 24
... means when he could not , or would not trouble to , adapt his means to his end . I say would not trouble to . " He may have been - as he seems to have been very careless in matters over which a modern playwright would be scrupulous ( I ...
... means when he could not , or would not trouble to , adapt his means to his end . I say would not trouble to . " He may have been - as he seems to have been very careless in matters over which a modern playwright would be scrupulous ( I ...
Seite 26
... means to move them the more pro- foundly once he had them in his grip . And these- here is my point - are not simply superficial matters . For the playwright must make methods germane to characters . They are among the signposts , then ...
... means to move them the more pro- foundly once he had them in his grip . And these- here is my point - are not simply superficial matters . For the playwright must make methods germane to characters . They are among the signposts , then ...
Seite 27
... , we must remember , was played by a boy . Now I do not mean that Shakespeare let his fundamental conception of the woman , Hamlet's mother , be influenced by that . But note , SOME TASKS FOR DRAMATIC SCHOLARSHIP . 27.
... , we must remember , was played by a boy . Now I do not mean that Shakespeare let his fundamental conception of the woman , Hamlet's mother , be influenced by that . But note , SOME TASKS FOR DRAMATIC SCHOLARSHIP . 27.
Seite 32
... means by which he could enlarge the appreciation of his subject , and further as I suggest by which he could enlarge his own knowledge of it . There is everything in a point of view . And this one seems to me such an eminently ...
... means by which he could enlarge the appreciation of his subject , and further as I suggest by which he could enlarge his own knowledge of it . There is everything in a point of view . And this one seems to me such an eminently ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor aesthetic ALFRED NOYES appear appreciation Apuleius artist audience beauty called Carlyle centenary century Cezanne Cobbett colour complete concerned consider contemporary course criticism decorative Demogorgon drama dramatic art dramatist edited El Greco Elisabethan England English English language essay expression fact feeling flowers genius Greco historical human imaginative Impressionist instance intellectual Keats landscape language Latin light lines literary lyrical Mary Godwin matter means ment merely modern movement natural never Noyes Oxford India paper painter painting passages picture pigment plays poem poet Poetical poetry Post-Impressionism Post-Impressionists present principles Professor Prometheus pure realise recently recognised Revolt of Islam rhetoric Roman scholar seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare Apocrypha Shelley Shelley's Sir Henry SIR HENRY NEWBOLT Skylark sort soul speak speech stage structure Tennyson theatre things thought true universe verse W. E. Henley whole William Cobbett word Wordsworth writing