Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 71Gale Research Company, 1984 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 88
Seite 317
... ( line 121 ) . His parody of orgasm strikes critics as an appropriate answer to Nell's fatuous cry , " this love will undo us all . O Cupid , Cupid , Cupid ! " ( lines 105-6 ) . Although she gets no credit for it , Nell is grammatically ...
... ( line 121 ) . His parody of orgasm strikes critics as an appropriate answer to Nell's fatuous cry , " this love will undo us all . O Cupid , Cupid , Cupid ! " ( lines 105-6 ) . Although she gets no credit for it , Nell is grammatically ...
Seite 319
... ( lines 144-6 ) . This unsavory Achilles earns his declension from " the great Achilles " to " the large Achilles , " " god Achilles , " the " broad Achilles , " and " Sir Valor . " While the once great warrior lolls on his bed ...
... ( lines 144-6 ) . This unsavory Achilles earns his declension from " the great Achilles " to " the large Achilles , " " god Achilles , " the " broad Achilles , " and " Sir Valor . " While the once great warrior lolls on his bed ...
Seite 325
... ( lines 112-13 ) . Troilus himself lingers to " make a recorda- tion to my soul / Of every syllable that here was spoke . / But if I tell how these two did co - act / Shall I not lie in publishing a truth ? " ( lines 115-18 ) . Troilus ...
... ( lines 112-13 ) . Troilus himself lingers to " make a recorda- tion to my soul / Of every syllable that here was spoke . / But if I tell how these two did co - act / Shall I not lie in publishing a truth ? " ( lines 115-18 ) . Troilus ...
Inhalt
Character Studies | 10 |
Production Reviews | 35 |
Themes | 51 |
Urheberrecht | |
10 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Achilles action actor Agamemnon Ajax argues audience becomes body Cambridge characters chastity Claudius Collatine comedy comic Coppélia court critics cultural death deer desire Diomedes dramatic early modern Elizabethan emotion English essay Essex fairies Falstaff father female feminine film Ford forest gender Gertrude Ghost Greek Hamlet Hector Helen Henry hero homosocial honor Horatio hunting kill King Laertes language literary London Lucrece's madness male Mannerist masculine ment Merry Wives metaphor Mistress moral murder Ophelia Pandarus Patroclus play play's plot Poachers poaching poem political Polonius problem queen Rape of Lucrece relationship Renaissance revenge rhetoric role Romantic says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare social soliloquy soul speare speare's speech stage story suggests symbolic Tarquin theater theatrical Thersites thou tion Titus Andronicus tradition tragedy Troilus and Cressida Trojan Trojan War Troy Ulysses University Press victim Wives of Windsor woman women words York Zeffirelli's