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 5
... never examined the grounds of probability. He perhaps reads of a shipwreck on the coast of Bohemia; wholly taken up with so interesting an event, and only sollicitous for the fate of his hero, he is not in the least troubled at this ...
... never examined the grounds of probability. He perhaps reads of a shipwreck on the coast of Bohemia; wholly taken up with so interesting an event, and only sollicitous for the fate of his hero, he is not in the least troubled at this ...
Strana 15
... never thus deceived. We know that we are in the playhouse, that the persons before us are actors, and that the thing represented either happened before, or perhaps never happened at all. The pleasure we have in a dramatical performance ...
... never thus deceived. We know that we are in the playhouse, that the persons before us are actors, and that the thing represented either happened before, or perhaps never happened at all. The pleasure we have in a dramatical performance ...
Strana 27
... never greater', 'almost inconceivable', 'amazingly great', 'very great', 'extremely moving'. This writer seems unable to translate his enthusiasm into description or analysis, and we catch only a few glimpses of specific gesture or ...
... never greater', 'almost inconceivable', 'amazingly great', 'very great', 'extremely moving'. This writer seems unable to translate his enthusiasm into description or analysis, and we catch only a few glimpses of specific gesture or ...
Strana 30
... never whindled, whined, or blubbered. In his Rage he never mouthed or ranted. In recording his appreciation of Booth's Lear, however, Cibber focused on the man himself: Mr. Booth's general Deportment was Majestic, yet he used no more of ...
... never whindled, whined, or blubbered. In his Rage he never mouthed or ranted. In recording his appreciation of Booth's Lear, however, Cibber focused on the man himself: Mr. Booth's general Deportment was Majestic, yet he used no more of ...
Strana 37
... never rises to Mirth' but is ever 'a mixed Emotion of Joy and Malice', a humour which never 'takes off the Mask'. Thus in his wooing of Anne his dissimulation utters 'Words...[that] come from him like Flakes of feathered Snow, that ...
... never rises to Mirth' but is ever 'a mixed Emotion of Joy and Malice', a humour which never 'takes off the Mask'. Thus in his wooing of Anne his dissimulation utters 'Words...[that] come from him like Flakes of feathered Snow, that ...
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William Shakespeare: The Critical Heritage, Svazek 4 Brian Vickers Náhled není k dispozici. - 1995 |
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