Shakespeare's Wide and Universal StageC. B. Cox, Brian Cox, David John Palmer Manchester University Press, 1984 - 233 Seiten |
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Seite 18
... talk about Shakespeare's characters as if they were real people . Today , simple folk , like Lord David Cecil and Professor Dover Wilson , still do ; but the critically with - it do not , believing that this kind of talk makes no sense ...
... talk about Shakespeare's characters as if they were real people . Today , simple folk , like Lord David Cecil and Professor Dover Wilson , still do ; but the critically with - it do not , believing that this kind of talk makes no sense ...
Seite 19
... talk of the friends we all make in the pages of Shakespeare . The scent is still stronger in an earlier note from the same play ( IV.vii . 80 ) , where Johnson wrote , ' This is the last time Falstaff can make sport . The poet was loath ...
... talk of the friends we all make in the pages of Shakespeare . The scent is still stronger in an earlier note from the same play ( IV.vii . 80 ) , where Johnson wrote , ' This is the last time Falstaff can make sport . The poet was loath ...
Seite 26
... talk meaningfully about it if one chooses . Of course what Knights is really getting at is that this sort of talk leads to the physical division of Shakespeare's plays – the editing of Shakespearean anthologies . And to anthologies ...
... talk meaningfully about it if one chooses . Of course what Knights is really getting at is that this sort of talk leads to the physical division of Shakespeare's plays – the editing of Shakespearean anthologies . And to anthologies ...
Inhalt
Mr Becketts Shakespeare JOHN RUSSELL BROWN | 1 |
The argument about Shakespeares characters A D NUTTALL | 18 |
Shakespeare breaks the illusion JOHN EDMUNDS | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action actor Antony Arden audience aware become Benedick Bradley Brutus Brutus's Cassius characters Claudio Claudius Clown comedy comic Cordelia Coriolanus Coriolanus's course critics death Desdemona drama Elizabethan Elsinore essay Estragon fact false Falstaff father feel fool give Hal's Hamlet hath Henry hero honour human I.ii I.iii Iago II.ii illusion imagination irony Jaques Juliet Julius Caesar kill kind King King Lear Knights's L. C. Knights language Lear Lear's Leonato look Macbeth Malvolio metaphor mind moral Morgann murder nature Nurse Nurse's Olivia Othello pattern play play's plot Plutarch political Polonius Prince question reality recognise redeem response rhetoric Richard Richard III role Roman Rome Rosalind scene seems sense Shakespeare significance situation soliloquy speak speech stage suggests symbolic television tell theatre theatrical things thou tragedy tragic truth Viola Waiting for Godot Wilson Knight words