Shakspere's Silences, المجلد 10Harvard University Press, 1929 - 279 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 88
الصفحة 75
... play . As recently as 1921 , however , Quiller - Couch and J. Dover Wilson , in their ( Cambridge ) edition of the play , have once more insisted that this part of the ending cannot be Shakspere's . Their chief objections correspond to ...
... play . As recently as 1921 , however , Quiller - Couch and J. Dover Wilson , in their ( Cambridge ) edition of the play , have once more insisted that this part of the ending cannot be Shakspere's . Their chief objections correspond to ...
الصفحة 142
... play by play , in group A. Reminiscences or striking likenesses more essentially dramatic in nature - echoes of dramatic theme or mood , situation , or characterization - are presented play by play , in so far as they occur , in group B ...
... play by play , in group A. Reminiscences or striking likenesses more essentially dramatic in nature - echoes of dramatic theme or mood , situation , or characterization - are presented play by play , in so far as they occur , in group B ...
الصفحة 258
... play needs no excuse . Never excuse ; for when the players are all dead , there need none to be blamed . . . Come ... play ” may have been temperamentally disinclined to prologuizing ; just as he was doubtless as impatient with extempore ...
... play needs no excuse . Never excuse ; for when the players are all dead , there need none to be blamed . . . Come ... play ” may have been temperamentally disinclined to prologuizing ; just as he was doubtless as impatient with extempore ...
المحتوى
SHAKSPERES SILENCES | 3 |
SHAKSPERE AND THE UNHAPPY HAPPY ENDING | 64 |
SHAKSPERE AND SIR THOMAS BROWNE | 97 |
حقوق النشر | |
3 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
according action adapter appear beginning believe better Browne Browne's characters close comedies comes Compare Comus concerning course Covent Garden critics death dramatic Dream Drury Lane Duke early earth effect Elizabethan evidence evil example eyes fact fair finally give Hamlet happy hath heart heaven Henry indicate John Juliet King Lady Lear least less lines Macbeth means Measure merely Milton mind mortal nature never night once Paradise Lost passage performances perhaps piece play poets present probably Professor question quoted reason referred remains remembered rest Romeo Samson scene seems sense Shakespeare Shakspere Shakspere's silence sleep song speak speech spirit stage story suggested theatre thee things thou thought tragedy true turn whole writes young