In Shakespeare's DayJames Vincent Cunningham Fawcett Publications, 1970 - 351 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 24
Página 100
... feel a natural hunger and desire to relieve our sorrow by weeping and lamentation , and that this feeling which is kept under control in our own calamities is satisfied and delighted by the poets - the better nature in each of us , not ...
... feel a natural hunger and desire to relieve our sorrow by weeping and lamentation , and that this feeling which is kept under control in our own calamities is satisfied and delighted by the poets - the better nature in each of us , not ...
Página 313
... feel in any great strength the half- intellectual , half - nervous excitement of following an inge- nious complication . What we do feel strongly , as a tragedy advances to its close , is that the calamities and catastrophe follow ...
... feel in any great strength the half- intellectual , half - nervous excitement of following an inge- nious complication . What we do feel strongly , as a tragedy advances to its close , is that the calamities and catastrophe follow ...
Página 320
... feel , and exerts himself to meet , the difficulty that arises from their admission . The difficulty is that the ... feeling that man is a poor mean creature . He may be wretched and he may be awful , but he is not small . His lot may be ...
... feel , and exerts himself to meet , the difficulty that arises from their admission . The difficulty is that the ... feeling that man is a poor mean creature . He may be wretched and he may be awful , but he is not small . His lot may be ...
Contenido
Introduction by J V Cunningham page | 11 |
Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich | 17 |
Julius Caesar at the Globe 1599 | 27 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 27 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
action actors appear audience Ben Jonson Burbage called character comedy comic Cordeilla Court criticism Cymbeline daughter death delight divers doth drama earl effect Elizabethan England English evil excellent fable fault fear feel fortune friends gentlemen Hamlet hath Henry hero honor humorous Iago imitation INGENIOSO J. V. Cunningham jests John John Marston jokes Jonson JUDICIO justice kind King King Lear ladies laugh Lear live London Lord Lord Chamberlain Macbeth Majesty manner matter means mind moral nature never night Othello passions persons pity play players pleasure plot poet poetry present Prince Queen reason Richard Richard III ridiculous Romeo and Juliet scene servants Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy Simon Forman sort speak speech stage story theater thee thereof things Thomas Thomas Nashe thou thought tion tragic truth unto verse whole William Shakespeare words