Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth: Delivered at the Surrey InstitutionJ. Warren, 1821 - 356 Seiten |
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Seite 12
... common and a noble brood . He was not something sacred and aloof from the vulgar herd of men , but shook hands with nature and the circumstances of the time , and is distinguished from his immediate contemporaries , 12 GENERAL VIEW OF ...
... common and a noble brood . He was not something sacred and aloof from the vulgar herd of men , but shook hands with nature and the circumstances of the time , and is distinguished from his immediate contemporaries , 12 GENERAL VIEW OF ...
Seite 16
... common interest in the common cause . Their hearts burnt with- in them as they read . It gave a mind 16 GENERAL VIEW OF THE SUBJECT .
... common interest in the common cause . Their hearts burnt with- in them as they read . It gave a mind 16 GENERAL VIEW OF THE SUBJECT .
Seite 17
... common subjects of thought and feeling . It cemented their union of character and sentiment : it created endless diversity and collision of opinion . They found objects to employ their faculties , and a motive in the magnitude of the ...
... common subjects of thought and feeling . It cemented their union of character and sentiment : it created endless diversity and collision of opinion . They found objects to employ their faculties , and a motive in the magnitude of the ...
Seite 21
... common parent , is hardly to be found in any other code or system . It was " to the Jews a stumbling block , and to the Greeks foolishness . " The Greeks and Romans never thought of con- sidering others , but as they were Greeks or Ro ...
... common parent , is hardly to be found in any other code or system . It was " to the Jews a stumbling block , and to the Greeks foolishness . " The Greeks and Romans never thought of con- sidering others , but as they were Greeks or Ro ...
Seite 26
... common as the air we breathe . The first impulse of genius is to create what never existed before the contemplation of that , which is so created , is sufficient to satisfy the demands of taste ; and it is the habitual study and imita ...
... common as the air we breathe . The first impulse of genius is to create what never existed before the contemplation of that , which is so created , is sufficient to satisfy the demands of taste ; and it is the habitual study and imita ...
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admiration affected Beaumont and Fletcher beauty behold Ben Jonson breath character classical comedy common Cynthia's Revels D'Ol dead death Deckar delight Devil doth dramatic Duchess of Malfy Duke Eastward Hoe effeminacy Endymion Eumenides extravagant eyes faith fancy Faustus feeling fire flowers friends Friscobaldo genius give grace hand hath head heart heaven Hodge honour human Hydriotaphia imagination imitation Jeremy Taylor Jonson kings kiss learning live look Lord Lover's Melancholy manner ment Michael Drayton mind moral Muse nature never night noble Noble Kinsmen passage passion Petrarch play poet poetical poetry pride quincunxes racter Rhod says scene Sejanus sense sentiment Shakespear shew Sir Rad Sir Thomas Brown sort soul speak spirit striking style sweet taste thee there's thing thou thought tion tragedy true truth unto virtue woman words writers