How to Read Shakespeare: A Guide for the General ReaderHodder and Stoughton, 1913 - 292 páginas |
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... things are yours " . When I think of the great scholars who are devoting their days and nights to the interpre- tation of Shakspeare , I am half ashamed to bring into any kind of competition with their work that which is confessedly a ...
... things are yours " . When I think of the great scholars who are devoting their days and nights to the interpre- tation of Shakspeare , I am half ashamed to bring into any kind of competition with their work that which is confessedly a ...
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... things straight and rough places plain may have bred a certain facility in the art of divining the purpose of a play and tracking the continuity of thought from play to play or from one group of plays to another . In the quotations I ...
... things straight and rough places plain may have bred a certain facility in the art of divining the purpose of a play and tracking the continuity of thought from play to play or from one group of plays to another . In the quotations I ...
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... thing of beauty , and yet should sufficiently correspond with the facts to justify its name ; and the marvel of the whole thing is , how he could take the common and chaotic materials pre- sented in an ordinary chronicle and transmute ...
... thing of beauty , and yet should sufficiently correspond with the facts to justify its name ; and the marvel of the whole thing is , how he could take the common and chaotic materials pre- sented in an ordinary chronicle and transmute ...
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... things of the South : There's a saying , very old and true , " If that you will France win , Then with Scotland first begin " : For , once the eagle England being in prey , To her unguarded nest the weasel Scot Comes sneaking , and so ...
... things of the South : There's a saying , very old and true , " If that you will France win , Then with Scotland first begin " : For , once the eagle England being in prey , To her unguarded nest the weasel Scot Comes sneaking , and so ...
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... thing is expressed in lofty language ; but the dramatist , drawing a broad line beneath this picture , then , below this level of respectability , paints the picture of another world , where the clothing is , so to speak , taken off ...
... thing is expressed in lofty language ; but the dramatist , drawing a broad line beneath this picture , then , below this level of respectability , paints the picture of another world , where the clothing is , so to speak , taken off ...
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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
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