Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, 51 tomasGale Research Company, 1984 |
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Rezultatai 1–3 iš 71
38 psl.
... speak much they reckon thee light . If thou speak uncunningly , they count thee dull witted ; if thou speak cunningly thou shalt be counted but a shrew . If thou answer not quickly thou shalt be called proud or ill brought up ; if thou ...
... speak much they reckon thee light . If thou speak uncunningly , they count thee dull witted ; if thou speak cunningly thou shalt be counted but a shrew . If thou answer not quickly thou shalt be called proud or ill brought up ; if thou ...
82 psl.
... speak for themselves . Time and again he insists , like the Chorus in Henry V , that the audience must exercise its imagination , in order to accept the changes of time and scene : Be attent , And time that is so briefly spent With your ...
... speak for themselves . Time and again he insists , like the Chorus in Henry V , that the audience must exercise its imagination , in order to accept the changes of time and scene : Be attent , And time that is so briefly spent With your ...
94 psl.
... speak Lys . To any . Yet let me obtain my wish . Hel . Behold him . ( Pericles discovered . ) This was a goodly person , Till the disaster that , one mortal night , Drove him to this . Lys . Sir king , all hail ! the gods preserve you ...
... speak Lys . To any . Yet let me obtain my wish . Hel . Behold him . ( Pericles discovered . ) This was a goodly person , Till the disaster that , one mortal night , Drove him to this . Lys . Sir king , all hail ! the gods preserve you ...
Turinys
Love and Romance in Shakespeares Plays | 1 |
Pericles | 71 |
The Phoenix and Turtle | 138 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 5
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Shakespearean Criticism– Excerpts from the Criticism of William ..., 28 tomas Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1984 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Antiochus Antiochus's argues argument audience beauty birds boar body C. S. Lewis Cambridge Capulet characters chastity comedy comic context conventional Coppélia critics daughter dead death desire doth dramatic dream Elizabethan erotic essay date eyes F. T. Prince father female gender Gower Hamlet hath Hero and Leander human ideal incest King King Lear kiss Lady language lines literary London lovers Lysimachus male Marina marriage marry masculinity meaning ment Mercutio moral narrative nature night Othello Ovid Ovidian paradox passion Pericles Petrarchan Phoenix and Turtle poem's poet poet's poetic poetry Prince reading relationship Renaissance rhetoric role romance Romeo and Juliet says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's poem Shakespeare's Sonnets social speak speaker speare's speech story suggests symbolic Thaisa thee thou tion tragedy tragic trans truth Tybalt Univ University Press Venus and Adonis Wilson Knight woman women words York young