Essays by Divers Hands |
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Seite 54
... person he has begot and also with- drawing to observe him from without . This is the choicest achievement of all . It can be an achievement , of course , not merely of character but of total scene . No one surely really enjoys ...
... person he has begot and also with- drawing to observe him from without . This is the choicest achievement of all . It can be an achievement , of course , not merely of character but of total scene . No one surely really enjoys ...
Seite 97
... person : this is there in the words : ' but thou wouldest not thinke how ill all's heere about my heart . ' No one will find these claims surprising who remembers the words to which the First Quarto reduces Hamlet's whole speech here ...
... person : this is there in the words : ' but thou wouldest not thinke how ill all's heere about my heart . ' No one will find these claims surprising who remembers the words to which the First Quarto reduces Hamlet's whole speech here ...
Seite 160
... person / It beggared all description ' , and he is as good as his word . He does not describe Cleopatra , any more than Homer describes Helen in the Iliad : he describes her setting , and her effect upon other people . He imprints a ...
... person / It beggared all description ' , and he is as good as his word . He does not describe Cleopatra , any more than Homer describes Helen in the Iliad : he describes her setting , and her effect upon other people . He imprints a ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | 9 |
The Wedmore Memorial Lecture 1975 | 24 |
Don Carlos Coloma Memorial Lecture 1974 | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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afternoon beautiful believe Bertram called century character Christminster Christopher Ricks church cinco Cleopatra comedy death Emma English eyes Fanny father feel Frank Churchill girl grace Hamlet Hardy Hardy's heart heroines High Windows historian human ill all's heere Jane Austen Jude King L'Esprit des lois La Brède Lady Larkin later lecture perpetuates LECTURE This lecture legend letters Lettres persanes Lettres philosophiques light literary living London look Lord Lord Birkenhead Macbeth Mansfield Park marriage memory Milton Montesquieu mother never night notebooks novel novelist pain passion perhaps Philip Larkin play poem poet poetry Pope prose rhyme Saint scene sense Shakespeare sister Society sound stage story Stratford T. S. Eliot tarde tell theatre thing thinke how ill Thomas Hardy thought tion verse Voltaire Voltaire's West Knighton whaur Whitsun Weddings woman word wouldest not thinke writing wrote young