Two Shakespearean Sequences: Henry VI to Richard II and Pericles to Timon of AthensUniversity of Pittsburgh Press, 1977 - 245 Seiten |
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... present , each of whom has contributed his portion to the common treasury of Shakespearean traditions . In my own case I also feel obliged to acknowledge certain more specific if not quite tan- gible debts , especially to former ...
... present , each of whom has contributed his portion to the common treasury of Shakespearean traditions . In my own case I also feel obliged to acknowledge certain more specific if not quite tan- gible debts , especially to former ...
Seite 189
... present , between Protestant and Roman Catholic , between , in concrete terms , man and man , between descendants and ancestors . Tudor government , persistent national- ism , skilful propaganda and the crude foreign policies of Spain ...
... present , between Protestant and Roman Catholic , between , in concrete terms , man and man , between descendants and ancestors . Tudor government , persistent national- ism , skilful propaganda and the crude foreign policies of Spain ...
Seite 227
... present glories are financed by loans , and the bills are about to fall due . In Timon of Athens , however , worldly standards are as much in question as Timon , and for two reasons . First , Timon's spending is a form of nobility ...
... present glories are financed by loans , and the bills are about to fall due . In Timon of Athens , however , worldly standards are as much in question as Timon , and for two reasons . First , Timon's spending is a form of nobility ...
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Two Shakespearean Sequences: Henry VI to Richard II and Pericles to Timon of ... F W Brownlow Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 2013 |
Two Shakespearean Sequences: Henry VI to Richard II and Pericles to Timon of ... Frank Walsh Brownlow Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1977 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alcibiades allegory Ariel artist audience audience's beauty Bolingbroke Caliban Cardenio cause character Clarence Clifford comedy comic conscience criticism crown Cymbeline death drama dramatist dream Elizabethan England evil eyes Falconbridge feeling fiction Gloucester Gloucester's gods Gower Hamlet hath Henry VIII Henry's hero human Iachimo idea imagery imagination Imogen innocence irony kind King John King Lear King's Knight's Tale language Leontes London Marina means mind moral motive murder narrative nature Noble Kinsmen Pandulph Perdita Pericles pity play play's action plot poet poetic political Polixenes Posthumus Prince Prospero Queen readers reason Richard Richard II Romantic says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare shows soliloquy soul speaks speare's spectator speech stage story style symbol Tempest theatre Thebes thee theme Theseus things thou Timon of Athens truth Tudor turns Winter's Tale Wolsey Wolsey's words York York's Yorkists