Shakespearean Criticism: Yearbook 1993, a Selection of the Year's Most Noteworthy Studies of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, Band 25Michael Magoulias Gale Research, 1994 - 405 Seiten Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Seite 100
... eye ! Are you more stubborn - hard than hammered iron ? ( 65-67 ) Arthur persuades Hubert to send away the executioners : " O save me , Hubert , save me ! My eyes are out / Even with the fierce looks of these bloody men " ( 72-73 ) ...
... eye ! Are you more stubborn - hard than hammered iron ? ( 65-67 ) Arthur persuades Hubert to send away the executioners : " O save me , Hubert , save me ! My eyes are out / Even with the fierce looks of these bloody men " ( 72-73 ) ...
Seite 193
... eyes to see that his own fair daughter was foully decep- tive : in effect , " farre more Faire then Blacke " is countered by " farre more Blacke , then Faire " -and by the doubt about who ever has " eyes to see . " In their different ...
... eyes to see that his own fair daughter was foully decep- tive : in effect , " farre more Faire then Blacke " is countered by " farre more Blacke , then Faire " -and by the doubt about who ever has " eyes to see . " In their different ...
Seite 376
... eyes " ( 148.5 ) confirms his initial appraisal of himself as too blind to judge his mistress with any reliability . Since he explicitly tells us that his eyes " lie , " he invites us to scrutinize his statements throughout the sonnets ...
... eyes " ( 148.5 ) confirms his initial appraisal of himself as too blind to judge his mistress with any reliability . Since he explicitly tells us that his eyes " lie , " he invites us to scrutinize his statements throughout the sonnets ...
Inhalt
Loves Labours Lost and | 1 |
Measuring Female Sexuality in Measure | 12 |
Lars Engle Money and Moral Luck in The Merchant of Venice | 35 |
Urheberrecht | |
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