William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage Volume 4 1753-1765Brian Vickers Routledge, 2003 M09 1 - 568 páginas The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material. |
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Página 13
... sentiments. What must be the result of this? Why, narration is substituted in the place of the action, the weakness in the manners supplied by elaborate descriptions; and the quick and lively turns of passion are lost in the detail and ...
... sentiments. What must be the result of this? Why, narration is substituted in the place of the action, the weakness in the manners supplied by elaborate descriptions; and the quick and lively turns of passion are lost in the detail and ...
Página 14
... sentiments of a family were as much changed in three hours as they could have been in three years. We may by now agree with Langhorne's conclusion, 'that the accuracy of art has always been prejudicial to works of genius, and what they ...
... sentiments of a family were as much changed in three hours as they could have been in three years. We may by now agree with Langhorne's conclusion, 'that the accuracy of art has always been prejudicial to works of genius, and what they ...
Página 35
... sentiments, so he has likewise to accommodate the movement of his numbers to the nature of those ideas he means to express'. Webb explicitly rejects 'the common notions concerning Shakespeare', that he composed great poetry by accident ...
... sentiments, so he has likewise to accommodate the movement of his numbers to the nature of those ideas he means to express'. Webb explicitly rejects 'the common notions concerning Shakespeare', that he composed great poetry by accident ...
Página 43
... sentiments or expression with those of ancient or modern authors, or from the display of any beauty not obvious to the students of poetry; for as he hopes to leave his authour better understood, he wishes likewise to procure him more ...
... sentiments or expression with those of ancient or modern authors, or from the display of any beauty not obvious to the students of poetry; for as he hopes to leave his authour better understood, he wishes likewise to procure him more ...
Página 54
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William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage Volume 4 1753-1765 Brian Vickers Vista previa limitada - 2003 |
Términos y frases comunes
absurd actor adaptation admirable altered appear Arthur Murphy beauties character Cibber circumstances comedy Cordelia Coriolanus criticism Cymbeline daughters David Garrick death Dr Johnson dramatic edition English essay excellent expression eyes father faults Garrick genius give Goneril Hamlet hath heart heav’n honour Iago ideas imagination imitation Imogen Johnson judgment Juliet King Lear King’s Lady language Lear’s Leonatus Leontes Lord Macbeth madness manner Measure for Measure merit metaphor Midsummer Night’s Dream mind Murphy nature never night o’er observe Othello passage passion performed Philario piece play poet poet’s poetical poetry Pope Prince propriety Queen rage reader Review Richard Richard III Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene sense sentiments Shakespeare shew soliloquy soul speak speech spirit stage striking taste Tate Tempest theatre thee Theophilus Cibber thou thought thro Tragedy unnatural verse Veturia Warburton whole Winter’s Tale words wou’d writers