| Janet Ware, Al Davis - 2005 - 256 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Anne-Marie Edwards - 2005 - 195 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| William Shakespeare - 2000 - 180 str.
...them [actors] not: for there is an upstart crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his tigers heart wrapped in a player's hide supposes he is as...his own conceit the only Shake-scene in a country. The passage mimics a line from 3 Henry VI (hence the play must have been performed before Greene wrote)... | |
| Kate Pogue - 2006 - 248 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Kate Pogue - 2006 - 216 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| M. Guizot - 2006 - 436 str.
[ Omlouváme se, ale obsah této stránky je nepřístupný. ] | |
| Russell A. Fraser - 568 str.
...the players, burrs who used to stick to him, now fallen away. "Trust them not," he tells the Wits, for there is an upstart crow, beautified with our...his own conceit the only Shake-scene in a country. This cut deep. Years later, Polonious says how " 'Beautified' is a vile phrase." The upstart crow,... | |
| Jerome Neu - 2007 - 304 str.
...Shakespeare's abundance. Robert Greene, a rival dramatist, wrote in 1592 in his Groatsworth of Wit: "there is an upstart Crow, beautified with our feathers,...his own conceit the only Shakescene in a country" [quoted in Greenblatt 2004, 213].) The following translation of a string of invective from Rabelais'... | |
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