History of English Literature, Том 2F. Ungar Publishing Company, 1965 |
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Стр. 4
... follow the beaten track to the end , being persuaded that a fine philosophy - a special nobleness and dignity ought to be introduced into comedy , — that it was necessary to follow the example of the ancients , to imitate their severity ...
... follow the beaten track to the end , being persuaded that a fine philosophy - a special nobleness and dignity ought to be introduced into comedy , — that it was necessary to follow the example of the ancients , to imitate their severity ...
Стр. 84
... it exists also there where reason is dead . The idiot and the brute blindly follow the phantoms which exist in their benumbed or mechanical brains , No poet has understood this mechanism like Shak- speare . 84 BOOK II . THE RENAISSANCE.
... it exists also there where reason is dead . The idiot and the brute blindly follow the phantoms which exist in their benumbed or mechanical brains , No poet has understood this mechanism like Shak- speare . 84 BOOK II . THE RENAISSANCE.
Стр. 128
... follow the tender or gay melodies without reflecting that they interrupt the action . We dream elsewhere on hearing music ; here I bid you dream on hearing verse . " Then the speaker of the prologue retires , and the actors come on . As ...
... follow the tender or gay melodies without reflecting that they interrupt the action . We dream elsewhere on hearing music ; here I bid you dream on hearing verse . " Then the speaker of the prologue retires , and the actors come on . As ...
Содержание
THE RENAISSANCE | 1 |
cesses of sensuality 320 | 12 |
DramasCatiline and SejanusHow he was able | 14 |
Авторские права | |
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amidst artist beauty become Ben Jonson blood brain breath Cæsar characters Christ Christian church comedy conscience Coriolanus Corvino cries Cymbeline Cynthia's Revels death Desdemona divine doth dream drink dry idea ears emotions Epicone eyes faith Falstaff fancy father flowers fool genius grace Hamlet hand hath head hear heart heaven human Ibid idea images imagination Jonson Juliet kill king lady live look Lord Macbeth manners married metaphors Midsummer Night's Dream mind Molière monomania moral Morose Mosca murder nature never night noble Othello passion Pilgrim's Progress play poet poetical poetry pray prison reason religion Romeo Romeo and Juliet Rosalind says Sejanus sensuality sentiments sermon shake Shakspeare Shakspeare's sing sleep Sonnet Sonnet 29 Sonnet 98 soul speak spirit style sweet tender thee things thou thought tion unto vice virtue Volpone weeps whilst whole wife woman words