The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite xxx
... character . " To these succeed Laches , Blepsias , Gniphon , and " a whole heap of scoundrels " ; and all of them are treated to thwackings with the spade or pelting with stones , till they are content to leave him alone ; whereupon the ...
... character . " To these succeed Laches , Blepsias , Gniphon , and " a whole heap of scoundrels " ; and all of them are treated to thwackings with the spade or pelting with stones , till they are content to leave him alone ; whereupon the ...
Seite xxxi
... character , and yields fresh argument of the seemingly - unlimited scope and variety of his genius ; displaying in him a set of pow- ers which he has elsewhere kept unused , but which , even though possessed in a lower degree , have ...
... character , and yields fresh argument of the seemingly - unlimited scope and variety of his genius ; displaying in him a set of pow- ers which he has elsewhere kept unused , but which , even though possessed in a lower degree , have ...
Seite xxxii
... character which he loves : so that perhaps the worst we can say of him is , that he seems to be moved by an ambi- tion such as would have the reasons or the causes of his generosity rest entirely in himself , and not in any worthi- ness ...
... character which he loves : so that perhaps the worst we can say of him is , that he seems to be moved by an ambi- tion such as would have the reasons or the causes of his generosity rest entirely in himself , and not in any worthi- ness ...
Seite xxxiii
... character originated in sheer affectation . Timon justly despises the sincere cant of one who thus drives con- tempt of mankind as a trade ; for he knows it to be the offspring of disappointed vanity , seeking to indemnify its own ...
... character originated in sheer affectation . Timon justly despises the sincere cant of one who thus drives con- tempt of mankind as a trade ; for he knows it to be the offspring of disappointed vanity , seeking to indemnify its own ...
Seite xxxiv
... character of Timon , Shakspere gained dramatic remoteness from his own personality . It would have been contrary to the whole habit of the dramatist's genius to χχχίν have used one of his characters merely as a mask.
... character of Timon , Shakspere gained dramatic remoteness from his own personality . It would have been contrary to the whole habit of the dramatist's genius to χχχίν have used one of his characters merely as a mask.
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