Introduction to ShakespeareBooks for Libraries Press, 1895 - 136 Seiten |
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Seite 44
... moral earnest- ness of the Reformation . The fires of Smithfield were extinct ; the conspiracies against the queen had been defeated ; the Spanish fleet had been flung from our inviolable shores . A spirit of un- bounded energy was ...
... moral earnest- ness of the Reformation . The fires of Smithfield were extinct ; the conspiracies against the queen had been defeated ; the Spanish fleet had been flung from our inviolable shores . A spirit of un- bounded energy was ...
Seite 45
... moral purpose , and this didactic tendency had in a measure been saved from the aridity and abstractedness of mere allegory by the close connection of the Morality with historical passions , persons , and events . In both the Miracles ...
... moral purpose , and this didactic tendency had in a measure been saved from the aridity and abstractedness of mere allegory by the close connection of the Morality with historical passions , persons , and events . In both the Miracles ...
Seite 72
... moral worth and dignity . Parolles is almost too pitiful in his meanness to be a comic personage ; the exposure of his cowardice is hardly worth the trouble it costs . The sunshine and frolic of Twelfth Night and As You Like It have ...
... moral worth and dignity . Parolles is almost too pitiful in his meanness to be a comic personage ; the exposure of his cowardice is hardly worth the trouble it costs . The sunshine and frolic of Twelfth Night and As You Like It have ...
Seite 73
... moral crisis seems certain . If we may trust the Sonnets , he had given away his affections to a friend who wronged him , and though in the end Shakespeare transcended his sense of injury , the pain and indignation left a deposit in his ...
... moral crisis seems certain . If we may trust the Sonnets , he had given away his affections to a friend who wronged him , and though in the end Shakespeare transcended his sense of injury , the pain and indignation left a deposit in his ...
Seite 75
... moral doctrine which shuts him in from a true knowledge of the facts of existence and the characters of men ; both Hamlet and Brutus are summoned to act on great occasions , and to both ideas are more real than deeds . Brutus indeed can ...
... moral doctrine which shuts him in from a true knowledge of the facts of existence and the characters of men ; both Hamlet and Brutus are summoned to act on great occasions , and to both ideas are more real than deeds . Brutus indeed can ...
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