Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of ElizabethWiley & Putnam, 1845 - 218 páginas |
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Página 7
... keep a few of these always ready in capitals , and strike off the rest to prevent the tendency to a superfluous population in the repub- lic of letters ; in other words , to prevent the writers from be- coming more numerous than the ...
... keep a few of these always ready in capitals , and strike off the rest to prevent the tendency to a superfluous population in the repub- lic of letters ; in other words , to prevent the writers from be- coming more numerous than the ...
Página 19
... keep up the same Saturnalian license and open - house all the year round . They reserved themselves for great occasions , and made the best amends they could for a year of abstinence and toil by a week of merriment and convivial ...
... keep up the same Saturnalian license and open - house all the year round . They reserved themselves for great occasions , and made the best amends they could for a year of abstinence and toil by a week of merriment and convivial ...
Página 21
... keep an eye to the prominent features , the main chance . We are more for weight than show ; care only about what ... keeps a good deal of the soil in her own hands . Perhaps the genius of our poetry has more of Pan than of Apollo ...
... keep an eye to the prominent features , the main chance . We are more for weight than show ; care only about what ... keeps a good deal of the soil in her own hands . Perhaps the genius of our poetry has more of Pan than of Apollo ...
Página 23
... keep regular possession of the stage . Another set of writers included in the same general period ( the end of the six- teenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century , ) who are next , or equal , or sometimes superior to these in ...
... keep regular possession of the stage . Another set of writers included in the same general period ( the end of the six- teenth and the beginning of the seventeenth century , ) who are next , or equal , or sometimes superior to these in ...
Página 31
... keeping her poets in a sort of Fool's Paradise . The wit of Lyly , in parts of this romantic drama , seems to have grown spirited and classical with his sub- ject . He puts this fine hyperbolical irony in praise of Dipsas , ( a most ...
... keeping her poets in a sort of Fool's Paradise . The wit of Lyly , in parts of this romantic drama , seems to have grown spirited and classical with his sub- ject . He puts this fine hyperbolical irony in praise of Dipsas , ( a most ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth William Hazlitt Visualização integral - 1840 |
Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth William Hazlitt Visualização integral - 1849 |
Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth William Hazlitt Visualização integral - 1845 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
admiration affected Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson breath casuistry character comedy common Cynthia's Revels D'Ol dead death Decker delight devil doth dramatic Duchess of Malfy Duke Eastward Hoe effeminacy Endymion Eumenides extravagance eyes faith fancy Faustus feeling fire flowers friends Friscobaldo genius give grace hand hath head heart heaven Hodge honour human Hydriotaphia imagination imitation Jeremy Taylor Jonson kings kiss learning live look Lord Lover's Melancholy manner Michael Drayton mind moral Muse nature never noble Noble Kinsmen passage passion Philaster play poet poetical poetry pride quincunxes Rhod romantic says scene Sejanus sense sentiment Shakspeare Shakspeare's Sir Rod Sir Thomas Brown sort soul speak spirit striking style sweet taste thee there's things thou thought tion tragedy true truth unto virtue Witches woman words writers youth