Remarks on Shakespeare's VersificationAMS Press, 1970 - Počet stran: 218 |
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Strana 112
... sometimes with himself , sometimes sorrow for friends . Sometimes his sadness finds relief in the thought of his friend . Tir'd with all these , for restfull death I cry ; As , to behold desert a beggar born , And needy nothing trimm'd ...
... sometimes with himself , sometimes sorrow for friends . Sometimes his sadness finds relief in the thought of his friend . Tir'd with all these , for restfull death I cry ; As , to behold desert a beggar born , And needy nothing trimm'd ...
Strana 149
... sometimes deficient syllables . It is certain that in passages of unrestrained feeling they have often , in Shakespeare , a great effect , while in Beaumont and Fletcher , and others , who affect them as a system , they add to the ...
... sometimes deficient syllables . It is certain that in passages of unrestrained feeling they have often , in Shakespeare , a great effect , while in Beaumont and Fletcher , and others , who affect them as a system , they add to the ...
Strana 150
... sometimes infers date from similar passages in other books , concluding that Shakespeare must have been the original . But " the thief of all thieves was the Warwickshire thief , " in a plainer sense than that of Garrick's song ...
... sometimes infers date from similar passages in other books , concluding that Shakespeare must have been the original . But " the thief of all thieves was the Warwickshire thief , " in a plainer sense than that of Garrick's song ...
Běžně se vyskytující výrazy a sousloví
accented acted beautiful Ben Jonson blank verse blood break broken Cæsar cæsura called character Collier comedy Comedy of Errors comic conceits Coriolanus crown curious Cymbeline death delight doth double endings dramatic dull effect enumerative eyes Falstaff fancy Farewell father feeling Fletcher flowing fourth style friends gentle Hamlet hand hath hear heart heaven Henry IV Henry VI Henry VIII honour imitation instance Jonson Julius Cæsar kind King lines long speeches look lord Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth Malone Marlow means merely Merry Wives metre mind nature never night observed old play Oldcastle Othello passage perhaps poems poet poetical poetry poor praise printed prose remarkable rhyme Richard Richard II Romeo scene seems Shake Shakespeare soliloquy sometimes Sonnets soul speak spirit sweet syllable taste tell thee thine thou art thou hast thought tongue Tybalt unbroken unto versification weak endings words writer written