The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 42
Seite vii
249-265 ; 283–294 ) ; the whole of scene ii ; Act II , sc . ii , 45–125 ; Act III , except sc . vi , 1015 3 118 ; Act IV , sc . ii ,. 1 Be it observed that the first page of Timon is really 78 , not 80 ; the mistake was due to the ...
249-265 ; 283–294 ) ; the whole of scene ii ; Act II , sc . ii , 45–125 ; Act III , except sc . vi , 1015 3 118 ; Act IV , sc . ii ,. 1 Be it observed that the first page of Timon is really 78 , not 80 ; the mistake was due to the ...
Seite xv
We have already intimated a belief that Shakespeare is not responsible for the whole of this play . Some parts are in his best manner , while others are not above his worst , or rather are not in his manner at all .
We have already intimated a belief that Shakespeare is not responsible for the whole of this play . Some parts are in his best manner , while others are not above his worst , or rather are not in his manner at all .
Seite xvii
To this theory Mr. Verplanck objects , that great as is the discrepancy of style and execution , yet , in the plot , the characters , and the incidents , there is an entire unity of thought and purpose , as if the whole proceeded from a ...
To this theory Mr. Verplanck objects , that great as is the discrepancy of style and execution , yet , in the plot , the characters , and the incidents , there is an entire unity of thought and purpose , as if the whole proceeded from a ...
Seite xviii
The fourth , and , in our view , the most probable , theory is that proposed by Mr. Verplanck ; who thinks that Shakespeare planned the whole drama substantially as we have it , made an outline of all the parts , including the entire ...
The fourth , and , in our view , the most probable , theory is that proposed by Mr. Verplanck ; who thinks that Shakespeare planned the whole drama substantially as we have it , made an outline of all the parts , including the entire ...
Seite xix
The whole matter comes in most abruptly , insomuch that our thoughts can hardly choose but revert to some scene or dialogue which has been omitted . Now , upon the supposal , —which bears such and so many marks of likelihood that ...
The whole matter comes in most abruptly , insomuch that our thoughts can hardly choose but revert to some scene or dialogue which has been omitted . Now , upon the supposal , —which bears such and so many marks of likelihood that ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alcibiades answer Apem Apemantus Athens Aufidius bear better cause character Citizens comes Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus dangerous death doubt enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fall fear Flav follow fool fortune friends give given gods gold hand hast hate hath hear heart hold honor keep kind ladies leave less live look lord Marcius matter means Menenius mind mother nature never noble original peace person play Poet poor pray present rich Roman Rome scene Senators sense Serv servant Shakespeare soldiers speak spirit stand sword tell thee thing Third thou thought Timon tribunes true turn unto voices Volsces whole worthy