Shakespeare in Fact and in CriticismW. E. Benjamin, 1888 - Počet stran: 355 |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 26
Strana 1
... gives what is called immortal- ity to human work ? What we have to guard against , I think , is the tendency of esthetic to be- come creative criticism and so demand from the text of Shakespeare certain propositions as to the man ...
... gives what is called immortal- ity to human work ? What we have to guard against , I think , is the tendency of esthetic to be- come creative criticism and so demand from the text of Shakespeare certain propositions as to the man ...
Strana 15
... of the metrical enumerators invariably gives all the great noble and admirable parts - not to the abstraction we call Shakespeare , but to the identical , his- -- torical man of that name . In other words , AND HIS ESTHETIC CRITICS . 15.
... of the metrical enumerators invariably gives all the great noble and admirable parts - not to the abstraction we call Shakespeare , but to the identical , his- -- torical man of that name . In other words , AND HIS ESTHETIC CRITICS . 15.
Strana 30
... gives thee releasing ; My bonds in thee are all determinate " ? Or , still more extreme example of this law - letter pedantry , the cxxxiv .: " And I myself am mortgaged to thy will , Myself I'll forfeit , so that other mine Thou wilt ...
... gives thee releasing ; My bonds in thee are all determinate " ? Or , still more extreme example of this law - letter pedantry , the cxxxiv .: " And I myself am mortgaged to thy will , Myself I'll forfeit , so that other mine Thou wilt ...
Strana 33
... give occasional emendations of their own . " And if this was true one hundred years ago , how much truer is it of these days ! Mr. White was recently able to show that an incident in " Romeo and Juliet " — which some of our most ...
... give occasional emendations of their own . " And if this was true one hundred years ago , how much truer is it of these days ! Mr. White was recently able to show that an incident in " Romeo and Juliet " — which some of our most ...
Strana 59
... gives to his wife ; though , as far as we are able to understand English probate law of that period , it was hers , had she wanted it , without any Will at all . But this latter Will makes no mention of stage - right in manuscripts ...
... gives to his wife ; though , as far as we are able to understand English probate law of that period , it was hers , had she wanted it , without any Will at all . But this latter Will makes no mention of stage - right in manuscripts ...
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actors Amicus Curiæ Amleth appears audience authorship Baconian Baconian theory believe called certainly character cipher circumstantial comedy court Davenant death dedicated Donnelly doubt dramatist Duke edition Elizabethan England English fact Falstaff father Folio Francis Bacon friends Furnivall Hamlet hand Heminges and Condell Henry honor John Fastolfe Julius Cæsar King lawyer lines literary London Lord Love's Labour's Lost madness matter ment Merry Wives murder never once Ophelia perhaps plaintiff poems poet Portia prince Prince Hamlet printed printers quarto queen reason record rhyme says scene seems Shakespeare plays Shakespeare Society Shakespearean authorship Sir John Oldcastle sonnets Southampton speare speare's speech stage statute Stratford supposed theater theory thing thou tion title-page Titus Titus Andronicus to-day tragedy Venus and Adonis verse verse-tests William Shake William Shakespeare Winter's Tale Wives of Windsor words write written wrote