Shakespeare: A Dramatic LifeSinclair-Stevenson, 1994 - 403 Seiten |
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Seite 64
... imagination . They are highly personal plays , revealing of his own attitudes to life and art . Imagination is the subject of some of the best - known lines in A Midsummer Night's Dream - Theseus's ' The lunatic , the lover , and the ...
... imagination . They are highly personal plays , revealing of his own attitudes to life and art . Imagination is the subject of some of the best - known lines in A Midsummer Night's Dream - Theseus's ' The lunatic , the lover , and the ...
Seite 68
... imagination : not the creative imagination but imagination that plays tricks on us , so that in the night , imagining some fear , How easy is a bush supposed a bear ! It is the commonsensical realist's attitude . But Hippolyta sees more ...
... imagination : not the creative imagination but imagination that plays tricks on us , so that in the night , imagining some fear , How easy is a bush supposed a bear ! It is the commonsensical realist's attitude . But Hippolyta sees more ...
Seite 174
... imagination in the game of pretending that ' Ganymede ' is Rosalind , so we have to use ours in remembering that Ganymede is actually Rosalind ; Shakespeare's audience would have had to make the additional imaginative leap required by ...
... imagination in the game of pretending that ' Ganymede ' is Rosalind , so we have to use ours in remembering that Ganymede is actually Rosalind ; Shakespeare's audience would have had to make the additional imaginative leap required by ...
Inhalt
EIGHT Comedies of Venice Messina France Illyria | 158 |
SIXTEEN A Lost Play Based on Don Quixote One Last English | 372 |
Index | 393 |
Urheberrecht | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
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action actors Antony appears audience becomes believe body bring called cause characters claim closing comedy comes comic create criticism daughter dead death direct Duke early edition effect Elizabethan emotional English episode expression eyes fact father fear feel figure final followed friends give Hamlet hand hath hear Henry human imagination John killed King language later Lear least less lines live look Lord lovers Macbeth means mind moral murder nature offers opening Othello passages performance perhaps play play's poem present Prince printed production Queen reason relationship response Richard role says scene seems seen sense Shakespeare shows soliloquy sonnets speaks speech stage story success suggest tale tells theatre theatrical thing thou thought tragedy true turns woman writing written wrote young