William Shakspere: A BiographyG. Routledge and Sons, 1867 - 553 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 87
Seite 35
... nature , with rural occupations , with athletic sports , which is incompatible with an inactive boyhood . It is not impossible that some natural defect , or some accidental injury , may have modified the energy of such a child ; and ...
... nature , with rural occupations , with athletic sports , which is incompatible with an inactive boyhood . It is not impossible that some natural defect , or some accidental injury , may have modified the energy of such a child ; and ...
Seite 36
... Nature , as Gray has painted him-- " The dauntless child Stretch'd forth his little arms and smil'd . " The only qualifications necessary for the admission of a boy into the Free Grammar School of Stratford were , that he should be a ...
... Nature , as Gray has painted him-- " The dauntless child Stretch'd forth his little arms and smil'd . " The only qualifications necessary for the admission of a boy into the Free Grammar School of Stratford were , that he should be a ...
Seite 40
... nature and the habits and friendships of his early life . But that tolerance does not presume insincerity in himself or his family . The Confession of Faith ' found in the roof of his father's house two hundred years after he was born ...
... nature and the habits and friendships of his early life . But that tolerance does not presume insincerity in himself or his family . The Confession of Faith ' found in the roof of his father's house two hundred years after he was born ...
Seite 42
... nature , as the wild blossoms and the fruit of a rich intellectual soil , uncultivated , but not sterile . Of the romances of chivalry might be read , in the fair types of Richard Pynson , Sir Bevis of Southampton ; ' and in those of ...
... nature , as the wild blossoms and the fruit of a rich intellectual soil , uncultivated , but not sterile . Of the romances of chivalry might be read , in the fair types of Richard Pynson , Sir Bevis of Southampton ; ' and in those of ...
Seite 44
... nature , of passion , his humour might have been as rich as we find it , and his wit as pointed , but that he would not have been the poet of the most profound as well as the most tolerant philosophy ; his insight into the nature of man ...
... nature , of passion , his humour might have been as rich as we find it , and his wit as pointed , but that he would not have been the poet of the most profound as well as the most tolerant philosophy ; his insight into the nature of man ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor amongst ancient appears audience Avon beautiful Ben Jonson Blackfriars Blackfriars Theatre Burbage called castle character Charlcote chronicler church comedy Court Coventry dance daughter described doth doubt dramatic Earl early Elizabeth England English Evesham familiar father friends garden genius gentleman George Peele Greene Guy's Cliff Hall Hamlet Hampton Lucy hath Henley Street Henry VI Henry VIII honour John Shakspere Jonson King lady land lived London look Lord Macbeth Malone Master merry mind Nash nature night noble pageant parish passage performed period persons play players playhouse pleasant poetical poetry present Prince probably Queen Richard Richard Burbage Robert Arden says scarcely Scene servants Shak Shakspere's Shottery solemn song spirit stage story Stratford Stratford-upon-Avon Susanna Hall Tamburlaine theatre things Thomas Lucy thou town unto Warwick Warwickshire William Shakspere words writing young Shakspere youth