Shakespeare Criticism: A SelectionDavid Nichol Smith Oxford University Press, 1968 - 371 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 96
... supposed capable to give us shade , or the fountains coolness ; but we consider , how we should be pleased with such fountains playing beside us , and such woods waving over us . We are agitated in reading the history of Henry the Fifth ...
... supposed capable to give us shade , or the fountains coolness ; but we consider , how we should be pleased with such fountains playing beside us , and such woods waving over us . We are agitated in reading the history of Henry the Fifth ...
الصفحة 177
... supposed adequate cause , we call nature . A like feeling of propriety and truth , supposed without a cause , or as seeming to be derived from causes inadequate , fantastic , and absurd , — such as wands , circles , incantations , and ...
... supposed adequate cause , we call nature . A like feeling of propriety and truth , supposed without a cause , or as seeming to be derived from causes inadequate , fantastic , and absurd , — such as wands , circles , incantations , and ...
الصفحة 178
... supposed without a cause ; the reason of which is that they are not the creation of the poet . but the servile copies or transcripts of popular imagination , con- nected with supposed reality and religion . Should the poet assign the ...
... supposed without a cause ; the reason of which is that they are not the creation of the poet . but the servile copies or transcripts of popular imagination , con- nected with supposed reality and religion . Should the poet assign the ...
المحتوى
JOHN HEMINGE d 1630 | 1 |
JOHN MILTON 160874 | 7 |
MARGARET CAVENDISH DUCHESS OF Newcastle 162474 | 15 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action admirable ancient appear audience Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Johnson Caliban character circumstances comedy courage criticism daughters delight dialogue drama effect English Euripides excellence expressed faculties Falstaff fancy faults feelings genius ghost give Greek Hamlet hath heart HENRY HOME honour human humour Iago images imagination imitation impression judgment Julius Cæsar kind King Landor language Lear Macbeth madness Maurice Morgann mind moral murder nature never observation occasion Othello passion perfect perhaps play poet poetic poetry Polonius praise principles qualities reader reason represented Richard Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense sentiments Shak Shake Shakespeare Shakspeare's shew shewn Sir John Falstaff Sophocles speak speare speare's speech spirit stage Tempest thee thing thou thought thro tion tragedy true truth unity Venus and Adonis whilst whole William Shakespear Witches wonderful words writers