Eighteenth Century Essays on ShakespeareDavid Nichol Smith J. MacLehose and Sons, 1903 - 358 páginas |
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Página xii
... stage . He was more to the actor then , and more familiar to the theatre - goer , than he is now . It is true that from Betterton's days to Garrick's , and later , his plays were commonly acted from mangled versions . But these versions ...
... stage . He was more to the actor then , and more familiar to the theatre - goer , than he is now . It is true that from Betterton's days to Garrick's , and later , his plays were commonly acted from mangled versions . But these versions ...
Página xv
... stage in his Discourse upon Comedy , but his arguments were unavailing . The duller men found it easier to support the rigid doctrines , which had been fully expounded by the French critics . The seventh or supplementary volume of ...
... stage in his Discourse upon Comedy , but his arguments were unavailing . The duller men found it easier to support the rigid doctrines , which had been fully expounded by the French critics . The seventh or supplementary volume of ...
Página xvi
... Rymer had recommended , or to expel love from the stage , would , he argued , only ruin the English drama . But his belief in the classical rules . made him turn the Merry Wives into the Comical Gallant xvi INTRODUCTION.
... Rymer had recommended , or to expel love from the stage , would , he argued , only ruin the English drama . But his belief in the classical rules . made him turn the Merry Wives into the Comical Gallant xvi INTRODUCTION.
Página xix
... stage observed , than any production of a modern critic where there is not one of them violated ? The rigid critics continued to find fault with the structure of Shakespeare's plays . In the articles in the Adventurer on the Tempest and ...
... stage observed , than any production of a modern critic where there is not one of them violated ? The rigid critics continued to find fault with the structure of Shakespeare's plays . In the articles in the Adventurer on the Tempest and ...
Página xxii
... Stage , where the argument is based partly on the belief that Shakespeare had read Ovid and Plautus and had thereby neither spoiled his fancy nor confined his genius . The question was probably at this time a common topic of discussion ...
... Stage , where the argument is based partly on the belief that Shakespeare had read Ovid and Plautus and had thereby neither spoiled his fancy nor confined his genius . The question was probably at this time a common topic of discussion ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
acquainted admirable Ancients appears Author Beauties Ben Johnson Cæsar censure character Comedy Comedy of Errors conjecture copies Coriolanus correct Courage Cowardice criticism Double Falshood drama Dryden Dunciad edition of Shakespeare Editor English Errors Essay Farmer faults Folio Genius give Hamlet hath Henry honour humour Imitation Johnson judgment Julius Caesar Justice kind knowledge labour language Latin learning letter Love's Labour's Lost manner MAURICE MORGANN nature never obscure observation occasion omitted opinion original Ovid passage passion perhaps piece Plautus Players plays Plutarch Poems Poet Poetry Pope Pope's edition Preface Prince printed publick published reader reason Remarks Roman Rowe's Rymer says scenes seems shew shewn Sir John Falstaff Sir Thomas Hanmer Stage Stratford supposed taste Text Theobald thing thought thro tion Tragedy translation Troilus and Cressida truth verse Warburton whole William Shakespeare words write written Zachary Grey