A Guide to English Literature: The age of ShakespeareBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1963 |
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Seite 150
... imagination of the audience , and to persuade them , for the time , that what they behold in the theatre is really performed . The poet is then to endeavour an absolute domin- ion over the minds of the spectators ; for though our fancy ...
... imagination of the audience , and to persuade them , for the time , that what they behold in the theatre is really performed . The poet is then to endeavour an absolute domin- ion over the minds of the spectators ; for though our fancy ...
Seite 155
... imagining ? And there is something uncanny in the Elizabethan actor's power to turn himself into something imagin- ary ... imagination , which is liberated in dreams , is also set free when a player acts a passion ' in a dream of passion ...
... imagining ? And there is something uncanny in the Elizabethan actor's power to turn himself into something imagin- ary ... imagination , which is liberated in dreams , is also set free when a player acts a passion ' in a dream of passion ...
Seite 375
... Imagination , and Reason . The kinds of knowledge are : History , which derives from Memory ; Poetry , which derives from Imagination ; 375 BACON AND THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING.
... Imagination , and Reason . The kinds of knowledge are : History , which derives from Memory ; Poetry , which derives from Imagination ; 375 BACON AND THE ADVANCEMENT OF LEARNING.
Inhalt
BORIS FORD | 7 |
L G SALINGAR | 15 |
IAN WATT | 119 |
Urheberrecht | |
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