Introduction to ShakespeareBooks for Libraries Press, 1895 - 136 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 10
Seite 13
... of process for debt , a circumstance which might have kept the early soreness of feeling from subsiding . If it is any satisfaction to us we have some reason to believe that the barb prepared for Sir Thomas Lucy struck home.
... of process for debt , a circumstance which might have kept the early soreness of feeling from subsiding . If it is any satisfaction to us we have some reason to believe that the barb prepared for Sir Thomas Lucy struck home.
Seite 54
... feeling swelled into bombast , it was easy to perceive that the play must be of an early or comparatively early date . If the structure of the play and the grouping of the characters were stiff and symmetrical , it could hardly belong ...
... feeling swelled into bombast , it was easy to perceive that the play must be of an early or comparatively early date . If the structure of the play and the grouping of the characters were stiff and symmetrical , it could hardly belong ...
Seite 55
... feeling ; having employed rhyme at first freely , and then with reserve , he finally dis- carded it altogether . At the same time his blank verse underwent various changes , which may all be summed up in the general statement that it ...
... feeling ; having employed rhyme at first freely , and then with reserve , he finally dis- carded it altogether . At the same time his blank verse underwent various changes , which may all be summed up in the general statement that it ...
Seite 63
... feeling after a way of his own - that manner which was perfected in King Henry IV .; in both plays rhyme is freely used , much more freely , how- ever , in King Richard II . , which is certainly earlier in the chronological order than ...
... feeling after a way of his own - that manner which was perfected in King Henry IV .; in both plays rhyme is freely used , much more freely , how- ever , in King Richard II . , which is certainly earlier in the chronological order than ...
Seite 81
... feeling may be discovered through his Coriolanus ; he was certainly no demo- cratic idealizer of the mob ; if he acknowledged the good heart , he saw also the weak head of the people acting en masse , or swayed by the wily demagogue ...
... feeling may be discovered through his Coriolanus ; he was certainly no demo- cratic idealizer of the mob ; if he acknowledged the good heart , he saw also the weak head of the people acting en masse , or swayed by the wily demagogue ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor admirable appeared ardent Ben Jonson Betterton Burbage 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 heart HENRY CONDELL honour human imagination Introduction and Notes James Burbage Jonson Julius Cæsar Kean Kemble King Henry King John King Lear King Richard King Richard II later literature lived London Love's Labour's Lost Lucrece Malone Marlowe marriage Measure for Measure Merry Wives mirth noble Othello passion performance perhaps players poems poet poet's printed 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 Tempest theatre Thomas Timon tion Titus Andronicus tragedy tragic Troilus Twelfth Night Venus and Adonis verse volume wife William Shakespeare writes written youth