ELH., Volume 11Johns Hopkins University Press, 1944 ELH publishes studies that interpret the conditions affecting major works in English and American literature. The journal seeks to emphasize the importance of historical continuity in the discipline of letters without sponsoring particular methods or aims. |
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Page 93
... critics of that day , for the most part , passed over them in silence , reserving their dicta for what they considered more important ends : epic and dramatic poetry.2 The main tenor of the few critical remarks between 1660-1725 ...
... critics of that day , for the most part , passed over them in silence , reserving their dicta for what they considered more important ends : epic and dramatic poetry.2 The main tenor of the few critical remarks between 1660-1725 ...
Page 284
... critics have robbed the character of what the Elizabethans considered man's highest dignity - his own responsibility for his own life and character . Othello is less innocuous than modern critics conceive him because he ultimately is ...
... critics have robbed the character of what the Elizabethans considered man's highest dignity - his own responsibility for his own life and character . Othello is less innocuous than modern critics conceive him because he ultimately is ...
Page 288
... critics have made him out to be . He is understandably human - but he is not greatly noble . It is this , the refusal to face reality , this , the trait of self- idealization , which makes of Shakespeare's Othello a psycho- logically ...
... critics have made him out to be . He is understandably human - but he is not greatly noble . It is this , the refusal to face reality , this , the trait of self- idealization , which makes of Shakespeare's Othello a psycho- logically ...
Contents
JUL | 12 |
WILLIAMS WELDON M The Influence of Ben Jonsons | 38 |
MOTTER T H VAIL Garrick and the Private Theatres | 63 |
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