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 4
... heart. On the niceness of rules he founded his cause, And ravish'd from regular method applause. May we judge from the favours each poet has shar'd, Insipid is ART when with NATURE compar'd. The dominant reaction is to admit his faults ...
... heart. On the niceness of rules he founded his cause, And ravish'd from regular method applause. May we judge from the favours each poet has shar'd, Insipid is ART when with NATURE compar'd. The dominant reaction is to admit his faults ...
Strana 8
... heart of man, and is so rare a portion of felicity as to have been enjoyed, perhaps, only by two writers, Homer and Shakespeare' (No. 139), a judgment that Colman also expressed (No. 187). It was in terms of consistency of character ...
... heart of man, and is so rare a portion of felicity as to have been enjoyed, perhaps, only by two writers, Homer and Shakespeare' (No. 139), a judgment that Colman also expressed (No. 187). It was in terms of consistency of character ...
Strana 27
... heart. Not much more helpful is the essayist in the Universal Museum (No. 191), for whom 'nothing could be finer spoke' than Garrick's soliloquy as Macbeth, 'Nothing could possibly be greater than Macbeth's seeing the daggers in the air ...
... heart. Not much more helpful is the essayist in the Universal Museum (No. 191), for whom 'nothing could be finer spoke' than Garrick's soliloquy as Macbeth, 'Nothing could possibly be greater than Macbeth's seeing the daggers in the air ...
Strana 30
... heart-breaking anguish of his Jealousy would have drawn Tears from the most obdurate; yet all his Grief, though most feelingly expressed, was never beneath the Hero. When he wept, his Tears broke from him perforce:—He never whindled ...
... heart-breaking anguish of his Jealousy would have drawn Tears from the most obdurate; yet all his Grief, though most feelingly expressed, was never beneath the Hero. When he wept, his Tears broke from him perforce:—He never whindled ...
Strana 61
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