Shakespeare Studies, Historical and Comparative in MethodUngar, 1960 - 502 pages A collection and study of Shakespeare's works. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 40
Page 43
... romantic for being a little irregular in their conduct : the irregularity is the outward sign and measure of their love . Generally it is apparent that this disguise is of the nature of an adventure ; in one sixteenth - century Ital ...
... romantic for being a little irregular in their conduct : the irregularity is the outward sign and measure of their love . Generally it is apparent that this disguise is of the nature of an adventure ; in one sixteenth - century Ital ...
Page 155
... romantic , or tragic , as well ; while Jonson's and Molière's are comic essentially and entirely , in so far as great works of dramatic art may be . ' What is more , this same mingled web or complex may in Shakespeare be found in the ...
... romantic , or tragic , as well ; while Jonson's and Molière's are comic essentially and entirely , in so far as great works of dramatic art may be . ' What is more , this same mingled web or complex may in Shakespeare be found in the ...
Page 305
... Romantic serious- ness and sympathy , at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth , made them so ; and only in recent years have criticism and the actor's art forsaken their strange imaginations and returned ...
... Romantic serious- ness and sympathy , at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the nineteenth , made them so ; and only in recent years have criticism and the actor's art forsaken their strange imaginations and returned ...
Contents
CHAPTER | 1 |
the device in Terence and Plautus 9 In sixteenth | 12 |
CHAPTER II | 36 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actor Antony appears artist audience Banquo Bessus Bradley Brutus Cæsar century chapter character Cleopatra clown comedy Comedy of Manners comic conscience contrast coward cowardice Creizenach cries criminals critics death delight devil doubt dramatist effect Elizabethan drama English fact Falstaff farce French ghost Hamlet hand heart Henry hero honour human humour Iago Iago's imagination irony Jonson Julius Cæsar King King Lear Lady Macbeth laugh Lear less literature matter means Merchant of Venice mind modern Molière moral Morgann motives murder nature Othello Panurge passion person Plautus play poet popular present Prince reality Renaissance repetition revenge Richard Richard III romantic says scene seems seen sense sentiment Shake Shakespeare Shylock Sir Walter Raleigh situation soliloquy sonnets soul speak speare spirit stage story Stratford superstition thing thou thought tion to-day tragedy tragic turn usury verse villain words writing wrote