"A Diamond, Though Set in Horn": Philip Massinger's Attitude to SpectacleInstitut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik, Universität Salzburg, 1984 - Počet stran: 282 |
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Strana 117
... possible once the bickering and misunder- standings have so completely enveloped the royal protagonists . There are several other scenes with a particularly visual focus which also contribute to our awareness of the deceptiveness of ...
... possible once the bickering and misunder- standings have so completely enveloped the royal protagonists . There are several other scenes with a particularly visual focus which also contribute to our awareness of the deceptiveness of ...
Strana 180
... possible.75 He shuns the fantastic masque more usual in the fantastic world of Fletcherian published Ph.D. thesis , University of Glasgow ( 1972 ) , 302-3 . The ' Late Morality ' or ' Moral Masque ' - including pieces like Middleton and ...
... possible.75 He shuns the fantastic masque more usual in the fantastic world of Fletcherian published Ph.D. thesis , University of Glasgow ( 1972 ) , 302-3 . The ' Late Morality ' or ' Moral Masque ' - including pieces like Middleton and ...
Strana 228
... possible source of the main story- line in BL ( EG iv.293-4 ) . See especially ' Artesia's triumph ' in Sir P. Sidney , The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia , ed . M. Evans ( Harmondsworth , 1977 ) , I.16.157-61 . Amongst the pictures of ...
... possible source of the main story- line in BL ( EG iv.293-4 ) . See especially ' Artesia's triumph ' in Sir P. Sidney , The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia , ed . M. Evans ( Harmondsworth , 1977 ) , I.16.157-61 . Amongst the pictures of ...
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action Actor actually already Antiochus appearance associations audience awareness become Cambridge captive Caroline Cavalier celebration ceremony characters chariot City clear contrast course court courtly dance death detail directions Domitian Drama draw Duke effects elements Elizabethan English enters entry example expression eyes fact feel Fletcher follows Fortune further give glorious glory Honour ideas important influence inner intended interest John King ladies later least less Lover masque Massinger Massinger's meaning moral nature once Oxford Peace performed perhaps physical play Poems political pomp possible present procession Queen reality references remains Renaissance Revels Roman Roman Actor royal scene seems seen sense Shakespeare significance similar simply slave spectacle spectacular spiritual stage suggest theatre theatrical tradition Tragedy triumph triumphal true victory virtue visual visual effects vols