Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 38Gale Research Company, 1998 |
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Seite 27
... marriage as companionship , no endorsement of nuptial love , no idealization of married pleasure . In the cir- cumstances the only way to differentiate love from lust is to purge it of all sexual reference , and so rigorous a policing ...
... marriage as companionship , no endorsement of nuptial love , no idealization of married pleasure . In the cir- cumstances the only way to differentiate love from lust is to purge it of all sexual reference , and so rigorous a policing ...
Seite 328
... married life . To what degree Shakespeare's phrasing may have been prompted by the biblical thought that in the resurrection " they shall neither marry nor be married " remains conjecture . In the metaphysi- cal vein the phrase would ...
... married life . To what degree Shakespeare's phrasing may have been prompted by the biblical thought that in the resurrection " they shall neither marry nor be married " remains conjecture . In the metaphysi- cal vein the phrase would ...
Seite 329
... marriage . He seems to have begun his poem without any allegorical intention , and to have thought of the Phoenix ( correctly ) as sexless . His revi- sions , which I suggest were made when he knew that Ursula Stanley was to be married ...
... marriage . He seems to have begun his poem without any allegorical intention , and to have thought of the Phoenix ( correctly ) as sexless . His revi- sions , which I suggest were made when he knew that Ursula Stanley was to be married ...
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