Essays by Divers Hands: Being the Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, Band 16 |
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Seite 10
... scene more vividly and give drama to the dialogue by his restraint . Such a scene is that in ' Kenilworth ' when Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich Palace insists on the reconciliation of Leicester and Sussex . But for the most part he wrote ...
... scene more vividly and give drama to the dialogue by his restraint . Such a scene is that in ' Kenilworth ' when Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich Palace insists on the reconciliation of Leicester and Sussex . But for the most part he wrote ...
Seite 18
... scene that more was to come of it . Miss Havisham was to end her miserable life by hanging herself in the old brewery . There is no sense in the passage otherwise , no reason why Pip STORY - TELLING . 19 d have this ghostly vision 18 ...
... scene that more was to come of it . Miss Havisham was to end her miserable life by hanging herself in the old brewery . There is no sense in the passage otherwise , no reason why Pip STORY - TELLING . 19 d have this ghostly vision 18 ...
Seite 56
... scene has the right tension . I have talked this over with the giants of old , Pinero and Henry Arthur Jones , and that accomplished dramatic critic Arthur Walkley . Tension seems to be as elusive as charm . On the eve of the production ...
... scene has the right tension . I have talked this over with the giants of old , Pinero and Henry Arthur Jones , and that accomplished dramatic critic Arthur Walkley . Tension seems to be as elusive as charm . On the eve of the production ...
Inhalt
Pirates and Their Books By Dr PHILIP GOSSE F R S L | 21 |
Technique of Novels and Plays By HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL F R S L 21 | 61 |
AngloIndian Verse By Sir HENRY SHARP C S I C I E M A F R S L 61 | 93 |
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adventures Aella Alfred Lyall amongst Anglo-Indian audience Barbary Barbary corsairs Bristol buccaneers called Canynges captive Cervantes characters Charles Johnson charm Chatterton church corsairs Credibility Cumulative tension death dialogue Dickens dramatist Dumas eighteenth century English eyes famous fancy fiction Gerald du Maurier hand humour imagination India Jane Austen John King Kipling lady letters literature lives London Lord Madagascar marks Mary Redcliff Miguel de Cervantes mind natural never novel novelist passionate piracy pirates Plantain play playwright poem poet poetic poetry printed published reader Robert Louis Stevenson Rowley rules scene ship SIGNIFICANCE TO-DAY Sir Henry Society song speak spirit story-teller Street style technique tell theatre thie thing Thomas Thomas Chatterton Thomas Lodge thou thought told true Walpole William Canynge words write written wrote wythe ynne young