| Eckhard Neumann - 1992 - عدد الصفحات: 292
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Jay Saunders Redding - 1992 - عدد الصفحات: 252
...historian, and critic was filled with both. One might say of him, as Dryden said of Shakespeare, that "when he describes anything, you more than see it, you feel it too." A Shakespearean scholar himself, Redding was, however, best known as one of the first great scholars... | |
| David Hopkins - 1994 - عدد الصفحات: 275
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Peter Holbrook - 1994 - عدد الصفحات: 214
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Steven Shankman - 1994 - عدد الصفحات: 360
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| D.H. Craig - 2002 - عدد الصفحات: 523
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Brian Vickers - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 585
...was yet not rectified, nor his allusions understood; yet then did Dryden pronounce that Shakespeare 'was the man, who, of all modern and perhaps ancient...them not laboriously, but luckily. When he describes any thing, you more than see it, you feel it too. Those who accuse him to have wanted learning, give... | |
| Jean I. Marsden - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 214
...English Poetry" (II, 4), while Dryden, in the encomium in the Essay of Dramatic Poesy, commends him as "the man who of all modern, and perhaps ancient poets had the largest and most comprehensive soul" — "soul" being the seat of inspiration and thus of poetic greatness. Such eulogizing presents Shakespeare... | |
| John Dryden - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 618
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
| Myra Shulman - 1995 - عدد الصفحات: 376
[ عذرًا، محتوى هذه الصفحة مقيَّد ] | |
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