William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage Volume 4 1753-1765Brian Vickers Routledge, 1. 9. 2003 - Počet stran: 568 The Critical Heritage gathers together a large body of critical sources on major figures in literature. Each volume presents contemporary responses to a writer's work, enabling student and researcher to read the material. |
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Strana 1
... tragedy, nevertheless ended his essay on the Greeks with the affirmation that all their virtues were 'united and surpass'd in the immortal and inimitable Shakespeare' (No. 180). In EdwardYoung's essay on originality Shakespeare was ...
... tragedy, nevertheless ended his essay on the Greeks with the affirmation that all their virtues were 'united and surpass'd in the immortal and inimitable Shakespeare' (No. 180). In EdwardYoung's essay on originality Shakespeare was ...
Strana 7
... tragedy—the word 'rub' is 'a vulgarism beneath the dignity of Hamlet's character', and 'a bare bodkin' is 'but a mean metaphor'. Although Smollett goes on to defend Shakespeare against some of Kames's criticisms,11 the general tone of ...
... tragedy—the word 'rub' is 'a vulgarism beneath the dignity of Hamlet's character', and 'a bare bodkin' is 'but a mean metaphor'. Although Smollett goes on to defend Shakespeare against some of Kames's criticisms,11 the general tone of ...
Strana 9
... Tragedy, and leave her without the due Reward of her Crimes. 'Cressida is false, and is not punish'd' (Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, Vol. 1, p. 250): those words of Dryden in 1679 show the consistency of Neo-classical principles ...
... Tragedy, and leave her without the due Reward of her Crimes. 'Cressida is false, and is not punish'd' (Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, Vol. 1, p. 250): those words of Dryden in 1679 show the consistency of Neo-classical principles ...
Strana 12
... tragedy is strictly confined to twenty-four hours: but why just twenty-four hours? Why, because Aristotle chose to ... tragedies seldom continues more than a few days. I wonder that Mr. Voltaire should mistake the historical for the ...
... tragedy is strictly confined to twenty-four hours: but why just twenty-four hours? Why, because Aristotle chose to ... tragedies seldom continues more than a few days. I wonder that Mr. Voltaire should mistake the historical for the ...
Strana 16
... tragedy that caused critical difficulty was Romeo and Juliet. Garrick's adaptation had cut many of the quibbles, but Charles Marsh for one was not satisfied, and records that in 1752 he had prepared 'an Alteration of Romeo andJuliet ...
... tragedy that caused critical difficulty was Romeo and Juliet. Garrick's adaptation had cut many of the quibbles, but Charles Marsh for one was not satisfied, and records that in 1752 he had prepared 'an Alteration of Romeo andJuliet ...
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