Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 8Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Seite 39
... thought or wit , and at worst a good deal of vulgar naughtiness .... Not until the Shakespear- ean music is added by replacing the paraphrase with the original lines does the enchantment begin . Then you are in another world at once ...
... thought or wit , and at worst a good deal of vulgar naughtiness .... Not until the Shakespear- ean music is added by replacing the paraphrase with the original lines does the enchantment begin . Then you are in another world at once ...
Seite 314
... thought which seems to run through the whole of The Tem- pest , appearing here and there like a colored thread in some web , is the thought that the true freedom of man consists in service . Ariel , untouched by human feeling , is ...
... thought which seems to run through the whole of The Tem- pest , appearing here and there like a colored thread in some web , is the thought that the true freedom of man consists in service . Ariel , untouched by human feeling , is ...
Seite 423
... thought . Frye's prediction is not so well based as Craig's : that Prospero , having achieved virtue and restored himself to power , will , upon his return to Milan , attend to practical affairs of state without abandoning study and ...
... thought . Frye's prediction is not so well based as Craig's : that Prospero , having achieved virtue and restored himself to power , will , upon his return to Milan , attend to practical affairs of state without abandoning study and ...
Inhalt
Richard III | 136 |
The Tempest | 280 |
Appendix | 475 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Antonio appears Ariel audience Beatrice and Benedick Beatrice's Benedick and Beatrice Borachio brother Buckingham Caliban character Clarence Claudio comedy comic conscience critic curse death deformity Dogberry Don John Don Pedro dramatic dramatist dream E. K. Chambers Edward elements Elizabeth Elizabethan essay date evil father feeling Ferdinand following excerpt give hath Henry Henry VI Hermann Ulrici Hero Hero's human imagination innocent King Lady Anne Leonato lover Macbeth magic Margaret marriage Messina Midsummer Night's Dream mind Miranda moral murder nature Nemesis notes passion pattern person play play's plot poet poetic Prince Prospero psychological Queen Richard Richard III Richmond role romantic scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare slander soliloquy soul speare speare's speech spirit stage Stephano story suggests Sycorax symbol Tempest thee theme things thou tragedy tragic Trinculo true villain whole William Shakespeare Winter's Tale woman women wooing words