Shakespeare and Elizabethan Poetry: A Study of His Earlier Work in Relation to the Poetry of the TimeOxford University Press, 1952 - 279 Seiten |
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Seite 38
... means of educating himself , bringing out the best that he could do , and , perhaps , more truly presenting than the circumstances of life would ever allow , what his highest nature might be . The poets who conferred immortality on ...
... means of educating himself , bringing out the best that he could do , and , perhaps , more truly presenting than the circumstances of life would ever allow , what his highest nature might be . The poets who conferred immortality on ...
Seite 39
... means and method varied in accordance with the variety of purpose which he might propose . He worked according to law and his law was that of Decorum , or the right adaptation of means to ends . His object being settled , he was able to ...
... means and method varied in accordance with the variety of purpose which he might propose . He worked according to law and his law was that of Decorum , or the right adaptation of means to ends . His object being settled , he was able to ...
Seite 96
... mean in terms of Elizabethan thought I am not quite clear . But they would certainly have expected Othello as a negro ... means to meet it.20 Literature also had an ethical aim : it held the mirror up to Nature , and thereby enabled the ...
... mean in terms of Elizabethan thought I am not quite clear . But they would certainly have expected Othello as a negro ... means to meet it.20 Literature also had an ethical aim : it held the mirror up to Nature , and thereby enabled the ...
Inhalt
PRINTED IN ENGLAND | 1 |
Court Poetry of Elizabeths | 18 |
Elizabethan Poetic and | 35 |
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Shakespeare and Elizabethan Poetry: A Study of His Earlier Work in Relation ... M. C. Bradbrook Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1979 |
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