How to Read Shakespeare: A Guide for the General ReaderHodder and Stoughton, 1913 - 292 páginas |
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... speaking lands there are multitudes who read the dramatist with intelligence and delight ; but , in this century of universal reading , the numbers enjoying this means of culture might be vastly increased ; and the purpose of this book ...
... speaking lands there are multitudes who read the dramatist with intelligence and delight ; but , in this century of universal reading , the numbers enjoying this means of culture might be vastly increased ; and the purpose of this book ...
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... speaking world that none possessed of intellectual tastes and aspirations can pass him by ; and I should like to show to Christian people how , in spite of not a little which cannot but be repulsive to pure minds , they may reckon these ...
... speaking world that none possessed of intellectual tastes and aspirations can pass him by ; and I should like to show to Christian people how , in spite of not a little which cannot but be repulsive to pure minds , they may reckon these ...
Página 12
... speak , the concealed wires by which the puppets of history were moved and the ends towards which Providence was guiding the half - conscious movements of men . This , it seems to me , is a complete ex- aggeration . There is of course a ...
... speak , the concealed wires by which the puppets of history were moved and the ends towards which Providence was guiding the half - conscious movements of men . This , it seems to me , is a complete ex- aggeration . There is of course a ...
Página 14
... speaking with the force of conviction or only with the borrowed passion of the person of the drama . Occasionally , however , he drops the mask , and there is an accent which betrays that his own heart is speaking . Nowhere is this so ...
... speaking with the force of conviction or only with the borrowed passion of the person of the drama . Occasionally , however , he drops the mask , and there is an accent which betrays that his own heart is speaking . Nowhere is this so ...
Página 31
... speak , taken off , men are seen as they really are , and everything is called by its plain name . The highway - robbery of these cutpurses , he means to say , is just the soldiering of the warriors of the great world with the gilt ...
... speak , taken off , men are seen as they really are , and everything is called by its plain name . The highway - robbery of these cutpurses , he means to say , is just the soldiering of the warriors of the great world with the gilt ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
How to Read Shakespeare: A Guide for the General Reader REV James Stalker Pré-visualização indisponível - 2016 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
actors Antony and Cleopatra appears Brutus Cassius character Class comic Coriolanus Cressida crown Cymbeline daughter death delight doth drama dramatist England English Histories everything execution eyes Falstaff father feeling fool genius Gentlemen of Verona Graver Comedies Hamlet hand hath hear heart heaven Henry the Fourth Henry the Sixth hero human husband Julius Cæsar kind KING HENRY King Lear labour Lady Lord Love's Love's Labour's Lost lover Macbeth Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice Merry Wives mind murdered nature never noble Othello passages passion perfect play poet poet's Portia Prince Prospero Puritan Queen reader Roman Romeo and Juliet says scene Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shylock sleep Sonnets soul spirit Stratford Stratford-on-Avon sweet Tempest thee theme things thou thought throne Tragedies Troilus and Cressida turn Twelfth Night Ulrici wife woman women words youth