The Works of Shakespeare, Band 11Macmillan and Company, limited, 1903 |
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Seite 2
... instinct for freedom , which the spring let loose in every imagination , found visible embodiment ; the personification of the ebbing and rising tide of life in Nature , and , therefore , the sym- bol of the spontaneous and ...
... instinct for freedom , which the spring let loose in every imagination , found visible embodiment ; the personification of the ebbing and rising tide of life in Nature , and , therefore , the sym- bol of the spontaneous and ...
Seite 4
... instinct which prompts men of this tem- per to make a story of every happening by selecting the most striking incidents , rearranging them , and heightening the effect by skilful grouping , has made some kind of drama inevitable in ...
... instinct which prompts men of this tem- per to make a story of every happening by selecting the most striking incidents , rearranging them , and heightening the effect by skilful grouping , has made some kind of drama inevitable in ...
Seite 5
... disapproval , and they found audiences ; for the dramatic instinct lies deep in men , and the only way to shut out vulgar and indecent plays is to replace them by plays of a better quality . The 5 The Forerunners of Shakespeare.
... disapproval , and they found audiences ; for the dramatic instinct lies deep in men , and the only way to shut out vulgar and indecent plays is to replace them by plays of a better quality . The 5 The Forerunners of Shakespeare.
Seite 6
... instinct , but it did not fall into the later error of condemning the instinct itself ; on the contrary , it was quick to recognize and utilize that instinct . It had long ap- pealed to the dramatic instinct in its worshippers ; for the ...
... instinct , but it did not fall into the later error of condemning the instinct itself ; on the contrary , it was quick to recognize and utilize that instinct . It had long ap- pealed to the dramatic instinct in its worshippers ; for the ...
Seite 7
... instinct to set forth a truth too great and mysterious to be contained in words by symbols , which are not only more inclu- sive than words but which satisfy the imagination , and by action . The Church did not stop with a dramatic ...
... instinct to set forth a truth too great and mysterious to be contained in words by symbols , which are not only more inclu- sive than words but which satisfy the imagination , and by action . The Church did not stop with a dramatic ...
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