English Shakesperian Criticism in the Eighteenth CenturyH.W. Wilson Company, 1932 - 300 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 39
... passage in Julius Caesar - the scene in which Antony is left alone with the dead body of Caesar - is described as " altogether as daring and sublime " as the passage in Henry V. Steele's chivalry towards women , in an age frequently ...
... passage in Julius Caesar - the scene in which Antony is left alone with the dead body of Caesar - is described as " altogether as daring and sublime " as the passage in Henry V. Steele's chivalry towards women , in an age frequently ...
الصفحة 160
... passage from his letter ( July 15 , 1768 ) to Wal- pole , which has the additional value of showing that Voltaire's ... passage , Voltaire is clearly capable of understanding the nature of Shakespeare's genius . In discussing this ...
... passage from his letter ( July 15 , 1768 ) to Wal- pole , which has the additional value of showing that Voltaire's ... passage , Voltaire is clearly capable of understanding the nature of Shakespeare's genius . In discussing this ...
الصفحة 273
... Passages cited to give definiteness to Warton's critical statements . Parallel between Lear's reflection on the misery of life ( Thou must be patient . . . To this great stage of fools ! ) and similar passage in Lucretius . Warton not ...
... Passages cited to give definiteness to Warton's critical statements . Parallel between Lear's reflection on the misery of life ( Thou must be patient . . . To this great stage of fools ! ) and similar passage in Lucretius . Warton not ...
المحتوى
John Dennis 16571734 | 5 |
Nicholas Rowe 16741718 | 13 |
Charles Gildon 16651724 | 23 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
accept acter action Addison admiration Æschylus appreciation artistic attempt beauties Caliban characters classical Coleridge Colman comedy comic Coriolanus Corneille declares defects defence Dennis discussion dramatic dramatist Dryden edition English enthusiastic Essay Euripides excellence expression Falstaff faults feeling Gildon Greek Hamlet Hanmer Hazlitt Henry Henry IV historical Homer Hughes imagination importance interest John Johnson judgment Julius Caesar Kames King Lear lack Lear's learning literary Macbeth Mackenzie Merchant of Venice merits method Montagu moral Morgann nature Number observations original Othello passage passion plot poet poetic poetic justice poetry Pope Pope's praise Preface qualities regarded remarks Richard Richard III Richardson romantic Rowe Rowe's rules Rymer scene sentiments Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's genius Shakesperian criticism soliloquy Sophocles speare speare's Spectator speech stage statement Steele's sublime superior taste Tatler textual criticism Theobald Thomas Purney tion tragedy tragic Unities verse violation Voltaire Voltaire's Warburton Warton Whately Witches writers Young's Zachary Grey