The Works of William Shakespeare, Volume 1Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Página 13
... drama is with some natures an instinct , and it would appear that the poet's father had an express taste in that direction . At all events , dramatic enter- tainments are first heard of at Stratford - on - Avon during the year of his ...
... drama is with some natures an instinct , and it would appear that the poet's father had an express taste in that direction . At all events , dramatic enter- tainments are first heard of at Stratford - on - Avon during the year of his ...
Página 14
... dramatic enter- tainment exhibited as were those at Stratford - on - Avon before the Corporation under precisely similar conditions , there then arises a reasonable probability that we should be justified in giving an affirmative reply ...
... dramatic enter- tainment exhibited as were those at Stratford - on - Avon before the Corporation under precisely similar conditions , there then arises a reasonable probability that we should be justified in giving an affirmative reply ...
Página 16
... drama as the Cradle of Security would now be considered , it was yet an advance in dramatic construction upon the medieval religious plays generally known as mysteries , which were still in favor with the public and were of an ...
... drama as the Cradle of Security would now be considered , it was yet an advance in dramatic construction upon the medieval religious plays generally known as mysteries , which were still in favor with the public and were of an ...
Página 17
... drama was provided with much beyond a few properties . The theater of the mysteries consisted of a movable wooden rectangular structure of two rooms one over the other , the lower closed , the upper one , that in which the performances ...
... drama was provided with much beyond a few properties . The theater of the mysteries consisted of a movable wooden rectangular structure of two rooms one over the other , the lower closed , the upper one , that in which the performances ...
Página 19
... drama which can be fairly considered to be of an immodest character , although many of them were ex- travagantly whimsical . Thus Herod was always intro- duced wearing red gloves , while his clothes and head- gear seem to have been ...
... drama which can be fairly considered to be of an immodest character , although many of them were ex- travagantly whimsical . Thus Herod was always intro- duced wearing red gloves , while his clothes and head- gear seem to have been ...
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xxxvii | |
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90 | |
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37 | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
Alarum battle blood brother Burgundy Cade Capell character Chronicles Clar Clarence Clif Clifford Collier conj crown death doth doubt drama dramatist Duke of Gloucester Duke of York Earl Edward emendation England English Enter Exeunt Exit father fear fight France French friends Glou Gloucester grace hand Hanmer hast hath head heart heaven Henry's Holinshed honor house of Lancaster house of York Jack Cade Joan John John Shakespeare King Henry lady latter live London lord Malone Margaret Mortimer never noble passage Plantagenet play poet poet's Pope prince Pucelle quarto Queen Reignier Richard Richard II Richard Plantagenet Salisbury scene Shakespeare shalt slain soldiers Somerset soul speak Stratford-on-Avon Suffolk sword Talbot tell theater thee thine thou art thought tion Titus Andronicus Tower town traitor unto Vaughan Warwick William Shakespeare Winchester words