John Webster and the Elizabethan DramaJohn Lane Company, 1916 - 276 من الصفحات Describes how certain animals keep warm, how the human body loses and retains its heat, and how various types of clothing and dwellings aid in heat retention. |
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الصفحة 8
... course , though nominally not about Webster , should be even more important to any understanding of him than the Appendices . And I have given two long chapters to the more direct consideration of what Webster wrote , and what its more ...
... course , though nominally not about Webster , should be even more important to any understanding of him than the Appendices . And I have given two long chapters to the more direct consideration of what Webster wrote , and what its more ...
الصفحة 16
... course to pursue , is to that there are certain kinds of human activity say which seem to hang together in classes , such as reading books , hearing music , seeing pictures ; and to examine our states of mind while we fol- low these ...
... course to pursue , is to that there are certain kinds of human activity say which seem to hang together in classes , such as reading books , hearing music , seeing pictures ; and to examine our states of mind while we fol- low these ...
الصفحة 26
... more than a rational one : not necessarily , of course , the same emotion continuously , but necessarily har- monious ones . I do not mean to suggest that the spectator of a play experiences a number of defi- nite 26 JOHN WEBSTER.
... more than a rational one : not necessarily , of course , the same emotion continuously , but necessarily har- monious ones . I do not mean to suggest that the spectator of a play experiences a number of defi- nite 26 JOHN WEBSTER.
الصفحة 44
... course , the religious drama . Religion , incessantly and half - consciously hostile to the arts , has inces- santly and half - consciously fostered them . Every activity of the mind of man is both end and means ; and it is as ...
... course , the religious drama . Religion , incessantly and half - consciously hostile to the arts , has inces- santly and half - consciously fostered them . Every activity of the mind of man is both end and means ; and it is as ...
الصفحة 60
... course , the romantic home of all beauty and art , had the most influence . But culture came from France . The English began translating Seneca for themselves in the sixties and seventies . As far as can be seen , the posi- tion in the ...
... course , the romantic home of all beauty and art , had the most influence . But culture came from France . The English began translating Seneca for themselves in the sixties and seventies . As far as can be seen , the posi- tion in the ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
æsthetic Appius and Vir Appius and Virginia Arcadia artist atmosphere audience authorship beauty beginning Ben Jonson bethan blank verse Bonvile borrowing Bosola Brachiano Chapman characters childish collaboration comedy couplets Cuckold Cure death Dekker Devil's Law-Case dramatist Duchess of Malfi Dyce Elizabethan drama Elizabethan play emotions English feel Flamineo Fletcher gives Grumph Heywood Icilius idea imitated instance John Webster Jonson kind of play less Lessingham lines literary literature Lust's Dominion Malcontent Marlowe Marston Massinger mediæval metre metrical mind Monticelso Monumental Column moral Northward Northward Ho note-book Parliament of Love passages passion performance period phrase plot poet probably quarto queer Rape of Lucrece rest Romelio Rowley satire scene seems Shakespeare Sir Thomas Wyatt soliloquy speech ster Stoll story style theatre things thought tion Tourneur tragedy various Vittoria Webster wrote Westward Westward Ho White Devil whole words writing written
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 202 - Bastard without a father to acknowledge it ; true it is that my plays are not exposed to the world in volumes, to bear the title of works (as others *) : one reason is, that many of them by shifting and change of companies, have been negligently lost. Others of them are still retained in the hands of some actors, who think it against their peculiar profit to have them come in print, and a third that it never was any great ambition in me to be in this kind voluminously read.
الصفحة 155 - Some would think the souls of princes were brought forth by some more weighty cause than those of meaner persons : they are deceived...
الصفحة 151 - I'll join with thee in a most just revenge: The weakest arm is strong enough that strikes With the sword of justice.
الصفحة 107 - I am puzzled in a question about hell : He says, in hell there's one material fire, And yet it shall not burn all men alike. Lay him by. How tedious is a guilty conscience ! When I look into the fish-ponds in my garden, Methinks I see a thing armed with a rake, That seems to strike at me.
الصفحة 108 - What dost think on ? Flam. Nothing ; of nothing : leave thy idle questions. I am i' the way to study a long silence : To prate were idle. I remember nothing. There's nothing of so infinite vexation As man's own thoughts.
الصفحة 277 - The White Devil, or, the Tragedy of Paulo Giordano Ursini, Duke of Brachiano, with the Life and Death of Vittoria Corombona, the famous Venetian Curtizan.
الصفحة 102 - Come, come, you have wronged her : What a strange credulous man were you, my lord, To think the Duke of Florence would love her ! 'Will any mercer take another's ware When once 'tis...
الصفحة 111 - With what a compell'd face a woman sits While she is drawing ! I have noted divers Either to feign smiles, or suck in the lips, To have a little mouth ; ruffle the cheeks, To have the dimple seen ; and so disorder The face with affectation, at next sitting It has not been the same : I have known others Have lost the entire fashion of their face In half an hour's sitting...
الصفحة 156 - Thou shalt lie in a bed stuffed with turtle's feathers ; swoon in perfumed linen, like the fellow was smothered in roses. So perfect shall be thy happiness, that as men at sea think land, and trees, and ships, go that way they go; so both heaven and earth shall seem to go your voyage.
الصفحة 214 - The Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyat. With the Coronation of Queen Mary, and the coming in of King Philip.