Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature of the United Kingdom |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 27
Seite 32
... play , pleasure could be given to the crowd through farce and a strong plot , and to the most discriminating by a subtle analysis of character or by a vital alertness of his language . He appealed to the moral attachments of his country ...
... play , pleasure could be given to the crowd through farce and a strong plot , and to the most discriminating by a subtle analysis of character or by a vital alertness of his language . He appealed to the moral attachments of his country ...
Seite 90
... play . They are the instruments not of Providence but of fatality . We have only to recall how the Elizabethans re- garded witches to realize their ambivalent character . In many respects Macbeth is an Elizabethan play and I have always ...
... play . They are the instruments not of Providence but of fatality . We have only to recall how the Elizabethans re- garded witches to realize their ambivalent character . In many respects Macbeth is an Elizabethan play and I have always ...
Seite 138
... play , is , I believe , the only one which fits all the facts . My point is that only the utilitarian necessities of stage - craft forced its solution . What is true of this detail in a small and unimportant play is equally true , I ...
... play , is , I believe , the only one which fits all the facts . My point is that only the utilitarian necessities of stage - craft forced its solution . What is true of this detail in a small and unimportant play is equally true , I ...
Inhalt
Giff Edmonds Memorial Lecture | 21 |
A MORALIZING FABULIST | 34 |
MARGARET FULLERAMERICAN CRITIC | 47 |
4 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
admirable appeared Banquo beauty Byron called Carlyle century character Coleridge Contributors costume romance creative writer Daniel Deronda death Dominique E. H. W. Meyerstein Editor Edward Marsh Emerson emotion England English experience Falstaff feel fiction Fromentin genius George Eliot George Henry Lewes grace Gwendolyn hand hath heart Henry historical novel honour human imagination India King Kipling Kipling's knew Lady Macbeth later letter literary literature living London Lord Lord Norwich Lorne Lodge Macduff Margaret Fuller mind Mirah Miss Fuller Monk Gibbon MONTEAGLE moral murder nature never night perhaps person play poet poetry prose Robert Speaight Romola Royal Rudyard Rudyard Kipling scene Scott seems Shakespeare Shelley Sir Edward Marsh sister sleep smell Society soldiers soul Southsea spirit story strange thee things thought tion translation Trix truth witches woman words writing wrote young