Shakespeare Studies, Historical and Comparative in MethodUngar, 1960 - 502 pages A collection and study of Shakespeare's works. |
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Page 46
... morality is made contemptible ; Mr Palmer says that it is not only beautiful but also highly moral , for it reflects and represents the morality of the age . Lamb and Macaulay are utterly opposed ; Mr Palmer agrees a little with both ...
... morality is made contemptible ; Mr Palmer says that it is not only beautiful but also highly moral , for it reflects and represents the morality of the age . Lamb and Macaulay are utterly opposed ; Mr Palmer agrees a little with both ...
Page 82
... morals too at times , as in the Renaissance , when public opinion offered little resistance . The most prurient dramatists in the Elizabethan age are not the loose - living actors or the roysterers Greene and Marlowe , but the sage and ...
... morals too at times , as in the Renaissance , when public opinion offered little resistance . The most prurient dramatists in the Elizabethan age are not the loose - living actors or the roysterers Greene and Marlowe , but the sage and ...
Page 145
... moral incongruities or para- doxes , in contentions or entanglements , keeping to the plain high road of life , as Coleridge said . An artist may be much interested in such things as questions and problems , and yet keep to the high ...
... moral incongruities or para- doxes , in contentions or entanglements , keeping to the plain high road of life , as Coleridge said . An artist may be much interested in such things as questions and problems , and yet keep to the high ...
Contents
ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF THE FOLIO | 1 |
CHAPTER III | 13 |
CHAPTER II | 36 |
Copyright | |
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actor Antony appears artistic audience Banquo Barabas Bessus Bradley Brutus Cæsar century chapter character Cleopatra comedy Comedy of Manners comic conscience contrast coward cowardice Creizenach cries criminals critics death delight devil doubt dramatist dream effect Elizabethan drama English fact Falstaff farce ghost Hamlet hand Harpagon heart Henry Henry VI Herford hero honour human humour hypocrite Iago Iago's imagination irony joke Jonson Julius Cæsar King King Lear Lady Macbeth laugh Lear less matter means Merchant of Venice mind modern Molière moral Morgann motives murder nature Othello passion person Plautus play poet Poins popular Prince Professor reality remark remorse Renaissance repetition revenge Richard Richard III romantic says scene seems seen sense sentiment Shake Shakespeare Shylock situation soliloquy soul speak speare speech spirit stage story superstition thing thou thought tion to-day tragedy tragic turn usury villain words writing