The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 1J. D. Morris, 1901 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 35
Seite 3
... criticism means too often reckless competition in hyperboles . So long as critics think it necessary to show their appreciative power by falling into hysterics , all dis- tinctive characteristics are obliterated . When the poet is lost ...
... criticism means too often reckless competition in hyperboles . So long as critics think it necessary to show their appreciative power by falling into hysterics , all dis- tinctive characteristics are obliterated . When the poet is lost ...
Seite 8
... Critics , I fancy , were it not for their charac- teristic modesty , might be induced by a skilful cross- examination to confess that their knowledge of Shake- speare is much more precise and distinct than they ven- ture to claim . If I ...
... Critics , I fancy , were it not for their charac- teristic modesty , might be induced by a skilful cross- examination to confess that their knowledge of Shake- speare is much more precise and distinct than they ven- ture to claim . If I ...
Seite 10
... critics from particular phrases or from the relations of Puritans to players in general . But without such reasoning we may go further and say that the very conception of a Puritan Shakespeare in- volves a contradiction in terms . He ...
... critics from particular phrases or from the relations of Puritans to players in general . But without such reasoning we may go further and say that the very conception of a Puritan Shakespeare in- volves a contradiction in terms . He ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acted actors Athens Bottom Burbage Cæsar called character comedy critics Custance death Demetrius doth dramatist Elizabethan era English drama Exeunt Exit eyes fair fairy Falstaff fancy father flower Folio fool gentle Gorboduc Greene Hamlet hand hast hath heart Helena Henry Hermia Hippolyta imagination John John Shakespeare Julius Cæsar King lady lion live London Lord Love's lovers Lysander Marlowe Merry Midsummer-Night's Dream mind miracle-plays moon moral-play nature never night Oberon passion personages Philostrate play players poet poet's Preface Prologue Puck Pyramus Pyramus and Thisbe Quartos Queen Quin Richard Richard Burbage Richard III rude scene Shake sleep Sonnets speak speare speare's spirit stage Stratford Stratford-on-Avon Susanna Hall sweet Tale tell theatres thee Theseus things Thisby thou tion Tita Titania tragedy true unto verse William Shakespeare write written