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Página 7
... inferior everything is to the Histories written later : the verse is comparatively
unmusical and the thinking thin ; few passages tempt to quotation ; the
representation lacks subtlety ; and the plot plods laboriously after the details of
the history .
... inferior everything is to the Histories written later : the verse is comparatively
unmusical and the thinking thin ; few passages tempt to quotation ; the
representation lacks subtlety ; and the plot plods laboriously after the details of
the history .
Página 9
No doubt , however , Richard the Third must have brought to the young poet
immense applause , for nothing equal to its best passages had ever before been
witnessed on the English stage ; he had probably been bitten , too , with the
interest ...
No doubt , however , Richard the Third must have brought to the young poet
immense applause , for nothing equal to its best passages had ever before been
witnessed on the English stage ; he had probably been bitten , too , with the
interest ...
Página 10
characters ; while in the comic passages , with which the two parts of Henry the
Fourth especially abound , he descends without difficulty from this exalted style
and abandons himself to the licence of a brilliant prose . In the characters there is
...
characters ; while in the comic passages , with which the two parts of Henry the
Fourth especially abound , he descends without difficulty from this exalted style
and abandons himself to the licence of a brilliant prose . In the characters there is
...
Página 15
The most wonderful passage of this kind is in the dying utterances of John of
Gaunt . The King , his nephew , has so mismanaged the revenues that they are
all pawned and bonded to creditors , and he , as his uncle tells him , is “ landlord
of ...
The most wonderful passage of this kind is in the dying utterances of John of
Gaunt . The King , his nephew , has so mismanaged the revenues that they are
all pawned and bonded to creditors , and he , as his uncle tells him , is “ landlord
of ...
Página 16
Passages like this must have roused enormous enthusiasm in the auditors who
first heard them ; and Shakspeare feeds their fervour by contrasting England and
the English character with other nations . He is impatient of the tendency of his ...
Passages like this must have roused enormous enthusiasm in the auditors who
first heard them ; and Shakspeare feeds their fervour by contrasting England and
the English character with other nations . He is impatient of the tendency of his ...
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How to Read Shakespeare: A Guide for the General Reader REV James Stalker Pré-visualização indisponível - 2016 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
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