Introduction to ShakespeareBooks for Libraries Press, 1895 - 136 Seiten |
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Seite 5
... Style , corresponds with our present May 5th . Stratford - on - Avon , in which Shakespeare spent his youth and to which he gladly returned in his elder years , was a town of gable - roofed , timber or timber - and - plaster houses ...
... Style , corresponds with our present May 5th . Stratford - on - Avon , in which Shakespeare spent his youth and to which he gladly returned in his elder years , was a town of gable - roofed , timber or timber - and - plaster houses ...
Seite 7
... style and make a speech " . According to another report he was a country schoolmaster , and Malone has argued from Shake- speare's frequent and exact use of law - terms that most probably he was for two or three years in the office of a ...
... style and make a speech " . According to another report he was a country schoolmaster , and Malone has argued from Shake- speare's frequent and exact use of law - terms that most probably he was for two or three years in the office of a ...
Seite 31
... style , should be of the opinion that Shakespeare often wronged his genius by careless writing : " I remember the players have often mentioned it as an honour to Shake- speare that , in his writing , whatsoever he penn'd he never ...
... style , should be of the opinion that Shakespeare often wronged his genius by careless writing : " I remember the players have often mentioned it as an honour to Shake- speare that , in his writing , whatsoever he penn'd he never ...
Seite 54
... style and diction , passing from the studious elaborateness of such a play as The Two Gentlemen of Verona to the subtlety in swiftness of utterance in such a play as The Tempest , came to the aid of evidence that was wholly or in part ...
... style and diction , passing from the studious elaborateness of such a play as The Two Gentlemen of Verona to the subtlety in swiftness of utterance in such a play as The Tempest , came to the aid of evidence that was wholly or in part ...
Seite 55
Edward Dowden. DEVELOPMENT OF STYLE . 55 No one who read the Comedy of Errors and Measure for Measure could suppose that they lay near one another in point of time ; no one could suppose that Romeo and Juliet , full of true passion and ...
Edward Dowden. DEVELOPMENT OF STYLE . 55 No one who read the Comedy of Errors and Measure for Measure could suppose that they lay near one another in point of time ; no one could suppose that Romeo and Juliet , full of true passion and ...
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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