The New Pelican Guide to English Literature: The age of ShakespeareBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1982 - 576 Seiten V.1. pt. 1. Medieval literature : Chaucer and the alliterative tradition. pt. 2. Medieval literature : the European inheritance -- v.2. The age of Shakespeare - - v.3. From Donne to Marvell -- v.4. From Dryden to Johnson -- v.5. From Blake to Byron -- v.6. From Dickens to Hardy -- v.7. From James to Elliot -- v.8. The present -- v.9. American literature. |
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Seite 241
... lines from Coriolanus it seems natural to give the verb this usual second - syllable stress : For that he has - As ... lines And as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown ... and then three lines later Such tricks hath ...
... lines from Coriolanus it seems natural to give the verb this usual second - syllable stress : For that he has - As ... lines And as imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown ... and then three lines later Such tricks hath ...
Seite 248
... lines is matched for length only by Hamlet ( the average was between 2,400 and 3,000 lines ) , was said by its author to take ' the space of two houres and an halfe , and somewhat more ' . There were no intervals , of course beer ...
... lines is matched for length only by Hamlet ( the average was between 2,400 and 3,000 lines ) , was said by its author to take ' the space of two houres and an halfe , and somewhat more ' . There were no intervals , of course beer ...
Seite 269
... lines ; the proper setting has been achieved , and Faustus , as already in the first scene , uses his own name almost mesmerically as a sort of incantation he is later to admit , ' the god thou servest is thine own appetite ' . He also ...
... lines ; the proper setting has been achieved , and Faustus , as already in the first scene , uses his own name almost mesmerically as a sort of incantation he is later to admit , ' the god thou servest is thine own appetite ' . He also ...
Inhalt
BORIS FORD | 7 |
L G SALINGAR | 15 |
PART II | 24 |
Urheberrecht | |
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