Shakespeare's Imagery: And what it Tells UsMacmillan, 1935 - 408 من الصفحات An analysis of the ways in which Shakespeare's imagery functions to reveal literary and personal motives. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 74
الصفحة 57
... senses , it is possible in some degree to separate and estimate his senses of touch , smell , hearing and taste , but his visual sense is so all - embracing - for it is indeed the gateway by which so large a portion of life reaches the ...
... senses , it is possible in some degree to separate and estimate his senses of touch , smell , hearing and taste , but his visual sense is so all - embracing - for it is indeed the gateway by which so large a portion of life reaches the ...
الصفحة 166
... sense of sin ' than would be experienced by a gardener looking at an overgrown and choked - up garden or a doctor treating a poisoned body . If we add what these pictures tell us to Bradley's masterly summary of Shakespeare's ...
... sense of sin ' than would be experienced by a gardener looking at an overgrown and choked - up garden or a doctor treating a poisoned body . If we add what these pictures tell us to Bradley's masterly summary of Shakespeare's ...
الصفحة 381
... sense - so deep in the older civilisations of Egypt and Babylonia - modern western man , from the early middle ages on , has strongly developed , symbolising it by the bell and later by the clock and watch . The Greek , on the contrary ...
... sense - so deep in the older civilisations of Egypt and Babylonia - modern western man , from the early middle ages on , has strongly developed , symbolising it by the bell and later by the clock and watch . The Greek , on the contrary ...
المحتوى
The Aim and Method explained 3 | 3 |
Shakespeares Imagery compared with | 12 |
Imagery of Shakespeare and other | 30 |
حقوق النشر | |
11 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
All's Antony Antony and Cleopatra Bacon beauty Ben Jonson birds body characteristic characters chiefly colour constant Coriolanus cries Cymbeline death declares Dekker describes dogs doth dramatists drawn Elizabethan emotion especially evil eyes fear feeling fire flood foul garden Hamlet hath heaven Henry Henry VI Honest Whore horror human idea imagery imagination interest Juliet kind King John King Lear large number Lear light Love's Love's Labour's Lost lovers Macbeth Marlowe metaphor movement nature night noticed Othello passion play poet prisoners realise Richard Richard II river Romeo Romeo and Juliet says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's images Shakespeare's mind sickness similes smell soul speare's sport sweet swift symbol tells Temp things thou thought Timon Timon of Athens touch Troilus and Cressida VIII vivid watch weeds whole wind words writers