The Works of Shakespeare ... |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 46
Página xi
And even with the aid of Gower the scenes are rather loosely tacked together , than closely interwoven . We see no more of Antiochus after his first appearance . His anonymous daughter utters but one un- intelligible couplet , and then ...
And even with the aid of Gower the scenes are rather loosely tacked together , than closely interwoven . We see no more of Antiochus after his first appearance . His anonymous daughter utters but one un- intelligible couplet , and then ...
Página xii
... scenes of very absorbing interest . The introduction of Gower , however inartificial it may seem , was the result of very profound skill . The presence of Gower supplied the unity of idea which the desultory nature of the story ...
... scenes of very absorbing interest . The introduction of Gower , however inartificial it may seem , was the result of very profound skill . The presence of Gower supplied the unity of idea which the desultory nature of the story ...
Página xiv
... and the scenes and shorter passages in which we trace him manifestly belong to his latest style of composition . Whether it had ever been acted before it received those vivifying touches from our poet , we cannot determine - perhaps ...
... and the scenes and shorter passages in which we trace him manifestly belong to his latest style of composition . Whether it had ever been acted before it received those vivifying touches from our poet , we cannot determine - perhaps ...
Página xix
far as mere literature is concerned , of the brothel scenes to anything in the first two Acts ; the impossibility of Shake- speare's marrying Marina to a man like Lysimachus ; the alterations of , and additions to , the Shakespeare work ...
far as mere literature is concerned , of the brothel scenes to anything in the first two Acts ; the impossibility of Shake- speare's marrying Marina to a man like Lysimachus ; the alterations of , and additions to , the Shakespeare work ...
Página xx
... out the three scenes , IV . ii . v . vi . , Shakespeare's presence is distinctly visible in characteristic expressions and turns of thought . These , indeed , are to my mind so striking and abound so largely that while space does ...
... out the three scenes , IV . ii . v . vi . , Shakespeare's presence is distinctly visible in characteristic expressions and turns of thought . These , indeed , are to my mind so striking and abound so largely that while space does ...
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
action Acts Antiochus appears arms Arranged Bawd better Boult bring brought Cleon comes Compare conjecture course daughter dead death Divided doth doubt Dyce edition Editors ending Enter Exeunt eyes faith father fear Fish fortune frequent give gods gold Gower hand hast hath hear heaven honour keep kind king Knight lady leave line in Qq live look lord Lysimachus Malone Marina master mean mind nature never novel original pare passage perhaps Pericles piece play poor present prince prose in Qq Quarto queen quotes rest Rowe SCENE Second seems sense Shakespeare shore speak Steevens story Tale tell Thai Thaisa thee thing Third thou thought Tyre unto Wilkins's wind Winter's wish worth