Shakespeare's Self-portrait: Passages from His WorkMacmillan, 1985 - 187 Seiten |
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Seite 6
... theatre in London . His success has confirmed the status he has won as ' gentleman ' , along with the best house in the town which it had enabled him to buy . His devotion to his native town is marked , and exceptional . Other theatre ...
... theatre in London . His success has confirmed the status he has won as ' gentleman ' , along with the best house in the town which it had enabled him to buy . His devotion to his native town is marked , and exceptional . Other theatre ...
Seite 8
... theatre . No time for sport in his later busy life - he must have devoted a good deal of time to it in those earlier youthful years . - - - However , he had a young family to support ; his father's affairs – the Alderman and Bailiff ...
... theatre . No time for sport in his later busy life - he must have devoted a good deal of time to it in those earlier youthful years . - - - However , he had a young family to support ; his father's affairs – the Alderman and Bailiff ...
Seite 9
... theatre ought - in Harry Truman's phrase – to have his head examined : sheer lunacy . There are scores of references to his profession , to the theatre and actors and acting - and from the inside point of view and experience of the ...
... theatre ought - in Harry Truman's phrase – to have his head examined : sheer lunacy . There are scores of references to his profession , to the theatre and actors and acting - and from the inside point of view and experience of the ...
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Shakespeare's Self-portrait: Passages from His Work William Shakespeare,Alfred Leslie Rowse Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1985 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor appears bear better body comes Company Court dark doth Dream early ears Elizabethan eyes face fair fall fear fortune gentle gentleman give Hamlet hand hang hast hath head hear heart heaven Henry Herne the Hunter honour hope horse issue John King lady leave light live London look lord Love's Labour's Lost married means Measure Merry Wives Midsummer mind nature never Night observe play players poet poor Queen reference reflects Richard seen Shakespeare sometime Sonnet soul sound Southampton speak spirit stage stand Stratford sweet Tale tell theatre thee thine things thou thought Troilus and Cressida true turned Twelfth unto verse Wives of Windsor write written young