The Elizabethan Dramatists as CriticsPhilosophical Library, 1963 - 420 Seiten |
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Seite 60
... hath more new words for his time than any man needs to devise now . ... And in the same epistle he defends himself against the charge of obscurity and the employment of an un - English style : My epistle dedicatory before my Seven Books ...
... hath more new words for his time than any man needs to devise now . ... And in the same epistle he defends himself against the charge of obscurity and the employment of an un - English style : My epistle dedicatory before my Seven Books ...
Seite 97
... hath been divers times acted . " The Prologue addresses the audience thus : Right noble and worthy assembly : it hath been a very ancient and laudable custom in the best governed commonwealths to admit and favorably to allow interludes ...
... hath been divers times acted . " The Prologue addresses the audience thus : Right noble and worthy assembly : it hath been a very ancient and laudable custom in the best governed commonwealths to admit and favorably to allow interludes ...
Seite 204
David Klein. Of acts and scenes : sometimes a comic strain Hath hit delight home in a master - vein , Thalia's prize ; Melpomene's sad style Hath shook the tragic hand another while ; The Muse of History hath caught your eyes , And she ...
David Klein. Of acts and scenes : sometimes a comic strain Hath hit delight home in a master - vein , Thalia's prize ; Melpomene's sad style Hath shook the tragic hand another while ; The Muse of History hath caught your eyes , And she ...
Inhalt
APPLIED CRITICISM | 1 |
EXCLUSIVE OF SHAKESPEARE AND JONSON | 18 |
A Variety of Demand | 172 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action actor Aristotle audience Bartholomew Fair Beaumont Ben Jonson brain censure Chapman Chorus clown comedy comic conceit criticism Dekker delight doth drama dramatists ears Elizabethan English Epil epilogue Epitasis expressed eyes Fletcher fool give grace hath hear Heywood Histriomastix Humor Ibid ignorance imagination invention Jonson judgment kings language laughter learned lord Love's Love's Labor's Lost Magnetic Lady Marston masque Massinger matter Middleton mirth Muses Nash nature never Northward Ho Parliament of Bees passage person play players playwrights plot poem poesy poet Poetaster poetic poetry present Prol prologue quoted reader Return from Parnassus rhyme Richard Flecknoe ridiculous Roaring Girl satire scene scorn Sejanus Shakespeare Shirley soul Spanish Tragedy speak spectators speech spirit stage strange sweet theater thee things thou thought tion Tomkis tongue tragedy true truth unto verse vice virtue words write