Byron and ShakespeareBarnes & Noble, 1966 - 381 Seiten |
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Seite 317
... VIII , returning from the lonely self - sufficient and self - directed quest of the dramas from Hamlet to The Tempest to a contemporary theme ; submitting his genius for the first time to the established religion of his day ; and for ...
... VIII , returning from the lonely self - sufficient and self - directed quest of the dramas from Hamlet to The Tempest to a contemporary theme ; submitting his genius for the first time to the established religion of his day ; and for ...
Seite 318
... VIII , there is an emphasis on ( i ) law and ( ii ) ritual . The first signifies a practical necessity without which neither the boldest thought - adventures nor even the criminal class itself could pursue their vocations steadily . The ...
... VIII , there is an emphasis on ( i ) law and ( ii ) ritual . The first signifies a practical necessity without which neither the boldest thought - adventures nor even the criminal class itself could pursue their vocations steadily . The ...
Seite 321
... VIII . Now in moving from writing to direct action in Greece Byron shows qualities correspondent to Hamlet's final behaviour and Shakespeare's composition of Henry VIII . There is evident in him a newly obvious - it was not really new ...
... VIII . Now in moving from writing to direct action in Greece Byron shows qualities correspondent to Hamlet's final behaviour and Shakespeare's composition of Henry VIII . There is evident in him a newly obvious - it was not really new ...
Inhalt
SONNETS AND SERAPHS | 24 |
A REGENCY HAMLET | 73 |
FALSTAFF AND COMEDY | 117 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alcibiades Antony and Cleopatra Augusta beauty Blessington Burning Oracle Cain called Canto Childe Harold Christian corresponds dark death Detached Thoughts Don Juan drama dream earth Edleston Elwin eternal evil Falstaff feel Gamba ghost Greece Hamlet hath heart Heaven Henry Henry IV Hobhouse honour human instincts Journal King Lear Kinnaird Lady Byron Lady Melbourne Lara LBCV letter lightning living Lord Byron Lord Byron's Marriage Lushington Macbeth Manfred mind Missolonghi Moore moral Murray Mutual Flame mystery Napoleon nature Newstead Origo Othello Parry passage passion perhaps phrase poem poet poetic poetry Pope Prospero quoted reference regarded Renaissance Richard Richard III Sardanapalus sense Sept seraphic sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Sonnet 20 Sonnets soul spirit symbol Tempest Teresa thee thinking thou Thyrza Timon of Athens tion tone tragic Trelawny Venice VIII virtue words writes youth