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 41
... perhaps been underrated – partly because plays and sermons were rivals for public notice . Playwrights like Dekker and Heywood - and even the satirist Middleton – shared the moral attitude of Perkins , and wrote primarily for the London ...
... perhaps been underrated – partly because plays and sermons were rivals for public notice . Playwrights like Dekker and Heywood - and even the satirist Middleton – shared the moral attitude of Perkins , and wrote primarily for the London ...
Seite 135
... perhaps the best known . They contain some fine things , but they do not represent the whole of Spenser . Books III and IV have a less clear - cut quality . They are free from the anti - Catholic propaganda of Book I , the black - and ...
... perhaps the best known . They contain some fine things , but they do not represent the whole of Spenser . Books III and IV have a less clear - cut quality . They are free from the anti - Catholic propaganda of Book I , the black - and ...
Seite 380
... perhaps be something like this : Shakespeare , in the person of his creation , Prospero , is asking himself , and asking us to consider with him , certain questions con- cerning the nature and the limitation of the dramatic illusion ...
... perhaps be something like this : Shakespeare , in the person of his creation , Prospero , is asking himself , and asking us to consider with him , certain questions con- cerning the nature and the limitation of the dramatic illusion ...
Inhalt
BORIS FORD | 7 |
L G SALINGAR | 15 |
PART II | 24 |
Urheberrecht | |
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