“The” Works of Shakespeare, Volumen33Methuen, 1904 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 30
Página x
... writing , performance , and publi- cation of this play are founded . These facts have become common property , and it will be unnecessary always to mention here who it was who happened to be the very first to draw attention to them ...
... writing , performance , and publi- cation of this play are founded . These facts have become common property , and it will be unnecessary always to mention here who it was who happened to be the very first to draw attention to them ...
Página xiv
... writing of Titus Andronicus , as being between 26th June 1593 and January 1594 , on account of alleged imitations on Shakespeare's part of Peele's Honour of the Garter , published at the former date . I must honestly confess , with ...
... writing of Titus Andronicus , as being between 26th June 1593 and January 1594 , on account of alleged imitations on Shakespeare's part of Peele's Honour of the Garter , published at the former date . I must honestly confess , with ...
Página xv
... writing of the Dream to the winter of 1595 . An important matter , and one somewhat difficult to decide is , whether we are to regard the plays given as Titus and Andronicus and Titus and Vespasian as being ( 1 ) one and the same play ...
... writing of the Dream to the winter of 1595 . An important matter , and one somewhat difficult to decide is , whether we are to regard the plays given as Titus and Andronicus and Titus and Vespasian as being ( 1 ) one and the same play ...
Página xxvii
... writing The Rape of Lucrece ? If Shakespeare thought this subject fit for a poem , which was to gain him the favour of the highest in the land , he could have no possible scruple against treating such a subject dramatically ; and when ...
... writing The Rape of Lucrece ? If Shakespeare thought this subject fit for a poem , which was to gain him the favour of the highest in the land , he could have no possible scruple against treating such a subject dramatically ; and when ...
Página xxix
... writers , however accomplished , and take their stations at an altitude that the others can never attain . Stars and lamps are very alike sometimes , but no lamp can for long persuade us that it has the altitude of the Plough or the ...
... writers , however accomplished , and take their stations at an altitude that the others can never attain . Stars and lamps are very alike sometimes , but no lamp can for long persuade us that it has the altitude of the Plough or the ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Aaron Alarbus Bassianus blood brother character Chaucer child Chiron clown Coriolanus Cymbeline death deed Demetrius Dict dost doth dramatic dramatist Elizabethan emperor empress Enter Exeunt eyes father favour friends gentle give Goths gracious Hamlet hand hath heart heaven Henry Henry VI honour horrible hunt Iago Julius Cæsar kill Lady Lavinia Lear live lord Love's Labour's Lost Lucius Lucrece lust Macbeth Marc Marcus Marlowe means modern Moor moral murder Mutius noble Othello passion Philomela play plot Publius queen Quint rape Ravenscroft repent revenge revolting Richard Richard III Roman Rome Rome's Romeo Romeo and Juliet Saturninus scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's authorship Shakespearian Sonnets sons sorrow Spanish Tragedy speak speare speare's speech Steevens story sweet Tamora tears Tereus thee thine thou hast Titus Andronicus tongue tragedy tribunes verse villain word writing ΙΟ
Pasajes populares
Página xliv - Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments. Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove: O, no ! it is an ever-fixed mark, That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wandering bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.