Shakespeare in Fact and in CriticismW. E. Benjamin, 1888 - Počet stran: 355 |
Vyhledávání v knize
Výsledky 1-5 z 70
Strana 9
... stage busi- ness and properties , the action and mise en scene employed . The text calls for the following programme : Act I. , Scene 2 . Alarbus's limbs are lopped and his entrails feed the sacrificing fire . Act I. , Scene 2. Titus ...
... stage busi- ness and properties , the action and mise en scene employed . The text calls for the following programme : Act I. , Scene 2 . Alarbus's limbs are lopped and his entrails feed the sacrificing fire . Act I. , Scene 2. Titus ...
Strana 11
... stage business that to- day , and for our modern theaters , needs no over- hauling . But in his mature manhood he had forgotten passion and stage business alike , pro- duced ragged and uneven affairs like " Pericles , " which few except ...
... stage business that to- day , and for our modern theaters , needs no over- hauling . But in his mature manhood he had forgotten passion and stage business alike , pro- duced ragged and uneven affairs like " Pericles , " which few except ...
Strana 17
... stage - setting , and that the author of the text , while also author of the poems , was certainly not one and the same indi- vidual as the stage editor who sets these plays for his boards . So far , at least , Mr. Furnivall's ...
... stage - setting , and that the author of the text , while also author of the poems , was certainly not one and the same indi- vidual as the stage editor who sets these plays for his boards . So far , at least , Mr. Furnivall's ...
Strana 21
... stage - manager would have put them there ( they were unnecessary to the mise en scène not only , but the audience would have yawned , or perhaps hissed at them ) ; though , if pressed for time or not recognizing them him- self , he ...
... stage - manager would have put them there ( they were unnecessary to the mise en scène not only , but the audience would have yawned , or perhaps hissed at them ) ; though , if pressed for time or not recognizing them him- self , he ...
Strana 25
... stage . Humbug ! Tragedy is a great literary effort designed , not to be read or meditated upon , but to be represented before a mixed audience . Its language , therefore , should be clear and unmistakable as it flows from the mouths of ...
... stage . Humbug ! Tragedy is a great literary effort designed , not to be read or meditated upon , but to be represented before a mixed audience . Its language , therefore , should be clear and unmistakable as it flows from the mouths of ...
Další vydání - Zobrazit všechny
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
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