What Shakespeare Read--and ThoughtCoward, McCann & Geoghegan, 1981 - 210 sider |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-3 af 30
Side 39
... stage and of acting were very different from the modern , dating back to the Restoration - and this makes a stumbling - block for critics not intimately acquainted with Elizabethan conditions . The stage itself was not the modern ...
... stage and of acting were very different from the modern , dating back to the Restoration - and this makes a stumbling - block for critics not intimately acquainted with Elizabethan conditions . The stage itself was not the modern ...
Side 64
... stage thought necessary . The intervention of eighteenth- century editors , which is religiously observed in modern texts , giving the Fourth Act of Antony and Cleopatra no less than fifteen scenes , is patently absurd - when the action ...
... stage thought necessary . The intervention of eighteenth- century editors , which is religiously observed in modern texts , giving the Fourth Act of Antony and Cleopatra no less than fifteen scenes , is patently absurd - when the action ...
Side 65
... stage hath shown . And , for their sake , In your fair minds let this acceptance take . Observing the success of Maria's and Sir Toby's plans to make a fool of Malvolio , in Twelfth Night , a servant of the Countess comments : ' If this ...
... stage hath shown . And , for their sake , In your fair minds let this acceptance take . Observing the success of Maria's and Sir Toby's plans to make a fool of Malvolio , in Twelfth Night , a servant of the Countess comments : ' If this ...
Indhold
PREFACE | 11 |
Shakespeares Education I | 11 |
Shakespeare and the Classics | 14 |
Copyright | |
9 andre sektioner vises ikke
Almindelige termer og sætninger
actor All's Antony audience bawdy Ben Jonson Blackfriars boys Burbage Chamberlain's character classical comedy comic contemporary Coriolanus Court doth drama dramatist Elizabethan Emilia Emilia Lanier English Essex eyes Falstaff familiar fellow Florio fool French gentleman Globe Hamlet hath heart Henry Henry VI honour human humours Jonson Julius Caesar King John knew Lady Latin Lear literary lived London Lord Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth Marlowe Marlowe's matter Merry Wives mind mistress Montjoy nature never observed Ovid passion patron patronage phrases play players poem poet poetry political popular Puritan Queen recognised references Renaissance revenge play Richard Richard II Robert Greene scene Shake society Sonnets Southampton speare's spirit stage story Stratford theatre theme thing thou thought throne Timon tragedy translation Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night Venus and Adonis William Shakespeare words writer young
Henvisninger til denne bog
Shakespearean Scholarship: A Guide for Actors and Students Leslie O'Dell Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2002 |