Jonson and ShakespeareMacmillan, 1983 - 221 Seiten |
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Seite 81
... moral effect upon its audience , and in Hamlet Shakespeare tests this contention directly by showing the reactions of an audience to a play presented in the King's palace , the very moral centre of the kingdom , before the King and ...
... moral effect upon its audience , and in Hamlet Shakespeare tests this contention directly by showing the reactions of an audience to a play presented in the King's palace , the very moral centre of the kingdom , before the King and ...
Seite 119
... moral standpoint , Shakespeare's comedies were deficient in their conclusions . At the end of As You Like It , for example , Johnson found that Shakespeare has ' lost an opportunity of exhibiting a moral lesson ' ; and , in general ...
... moral standpoint , Shakespeare's comedies were deficient in their conclusions . At the end of As You Like It , for example , Johnson found that Shakespeare has ' lost an opportunity of exhibiting a moral lesson ' ; and , in general ...
Seite 121
... moral but intellectual , and the audience is invited to consider the characters not in terms of good and bad , but in terms of clever and foolish . In this world wit is the positive good . Dupers successfully excuse their practices by ...
... moral but intellectual , and the audience is invited to consider the characters not in terms of good and bad , but in terms of clever and foolish . In this world wit is the positive good . Dupers successfully excuse their practices by ...
Inhalt
the Loneliness of Integrity | 18 |
Hamlet Macbeth | 35 |
Troilus and Cressida | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles action actors Ajax Alchemist Antonio's Revenge Arruntius attitude Ayres Barish Bartholomew Fair Beatrice Ben Jonson Benedick Campion characters Claudius clowns comic Coriolanus court Cressida critical dances drama dupe-plot dupers duping edition English essay example Falstaff feel folly fool Hal's Hamlet Herford and Simpson Hero honour human humour Ibid imagination Jonsonian judgement Julius Caesar King London Lord lovers Malvolio marriage masque texts memory Midsummer Night's Dream moral Pandarus past performance play play's players playwright plot Plutarch poem poetry political present Prince Prospero puppet Puritans remembrance Renaissance republic republican revenge ridicule role Roman Rome Sabinus scene seems Sejanus Sejanus's sense Shakespeare Shakespeare and Jonson Shakespeare's comedies Shakespearian Silius songs speaks speech stage audiences suggests sympathy Tacitus Tempest theatre theatrical thee Thersites Theseus thou Tiberius Tiberius's tragedy Troilus Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night usurper Volpone W. W. Greg words