Shakespeare's A Midsummer-night's DreamAt the Clarendon Press, 1912 - 72 Seiten |
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Seite viii
... true progenitors of Shakespeare's Oberon and Titania ' were Pluto and Proserpine in Chaucer's Merchant's Tale . What put him upon this idea I do not know , but it is possible to guess . He not only thought that a resemblance was visible ...
... true progenitors of Shakespeare's Oberon and Titania ' were Pluto and Proserpine in Chaucer's Merchant's Tale . What put him upon this idea I do not know , but it is possible to guess . He not only thought that a resemblance was visible ...
Seite xxi
... true it is that the play is in a wood . What Quince said of his company might be said of all the players in the action : their stage is a green plot , and a hawthorn brake is their tiring - room . All this is best tasted when a man is ...
... true it is that the play is in a wood . What Quince said of his company might be said of all the players in the action : their stage is a green plot , and a hawthorn brake is their tiring - room . All this is best tasted when a man is ...
Seite xxiii
... true and Spenser . explanation of what are called the anachronisms of Shakespeare . That they could ever have been ascribed to mere ignorance is a strange thing to think of , when the example of Spenser so clearly proves its folly ...
... true and Spenser . explanation of what are called the anachronisms of Shakespeare . That they could ever have been ascribed to mere ignorance is a strange thing to think of , when the example of Spenser so clearly proves its folly ...
Seite xxviii
... true that much rhyme in a Shakespearean play is normally a sign that the play is early . It is also true that the play we are considering is full of youthful imagination , that it contains more poetry than drama , that the plot is thin ...
... true that much rhyme in a Shakespearean play is normally a sign that the play is early . It is also true that the play we are considering is full of youthful imagination , that it contains more poetry than drama , that the plot is thin ...
Seite xxxi
... else . The question is , where did they get it ? Either they had some other version of this part of the play , or they were indebted to their memory as actors . Which- Con- clusion . ever be the true explanation , they INTRODUCTION xxxi.
... else . The question is , where did they get it ? Either they had some other version of this part of the play , or they were indebted to their memory as actors . Which- Con- clusion . ever be the true explanation , they INTRODUCTION xxxi.
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anachronisms Athenian Athens awake bless Bottom brier classical Cobweb Cupid's dance dear death Demetrius Diana dote doth duke editions Egeus Exeunt Exit eyes eyne fair fairy fancy fear flower Flute Folio follow four lovers gentle give green hast hate hath hear heart Helena Hercules Hermia Hippolyta hounds king Knight's Tale lady lanthorn lion look lord love's lovers Lysander marriage meaning Merchant of Venice Methinks Midsummer-Night's Dream moon moonlight Moonshine mounsieur Mustard-seed mythology never Nick Bottom night nymph o'er Oberon Ovid palace wood passage passion Pease-blossom Peter Quince Philostrate play plot Pluto poem pray prologue Proserpine Puck Pyramus and Thisby queen Re-enter roar SCENE scorn Second Quarto sense Shake Shakespeare sleep Snout Snug speak Spenser sport Starveling stol'n story sweet Tale tears Tempest thee Theseus thing Thisby's thou Titania tongue true wall Whe'r wonder word youth