Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 38Gale Research Company, 1998 |
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... suggests , is the very stuff of which social dramas are made . It figures a mounting crisis that envelops those observing and taking part in the unfolding action . At the same time , this temporal setting has a range of interpretative ...
... suggests , is the very stuff of which social dramas are made . It figures a mounting crisis that envelops those observing and taking part in the unfolding action . At the same time , this temporal setting has a range of interpretative ...
Seite 214
... suggesting a play on light- ness and wantonness : ' A woman sometimes , an you saw her in the light ' . To the ... suggests that the object of Longueville's curiosity is , to borrow Don Armado's phrase , ' a child of our grand ...
... suggesting a play on light- ness and wantonness : ' A woman sometimes , an you saw her in the light ' . To the ... suggests that the object of Longueville's curiosity is , to borrow Don Armado's phrase , ' a child of our grand ...
Seite 305
... suggests an asso- ciation in Shakespeare's mind between the image of the huntress with her deer and the image of the shrew with her henpecked husband . There is no other obvi- ous inspiration for the strange interjection : " Do not ...
... suggests an asso- ciation in Shakespeare's mind between the image of the huntress with her deer and the image of the shrew with her henpecked husband . There is no other obvi- ous inspiration for the strange interjection : " Do not ...
Inhalt
Desire | 1 |
Alls Well That Ends Well | 64 |
Loves Labours Lost | 163 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Actaeon Adonis's All's anthem audience beauty Berowne Berowne's Bertram bird character Chester's comedy comic conventional Countess critics death desire Diana doth dramatic Elizabeth Elizabethan English erotic essay date eyes Falstaff female final hath Helena honor husband ideal King King's ladies Lafew language lines London lords loue Love's Labour's Lost lovers lust M. C. Bradbrook male marriage married means ment Merry Wives metaphor nature Navarre Neoplatonic Othello paradox Parolles Petrarch Petrarchan Phoenix and Turtle play play's plot poet poetic poetry praise Princess Problem Comedies Queen Renaissance revenge role romantic Romeo Romeo and Juliet Rosaline Salusbury satire says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean comedy social Sonnet speare's speech stanza story suggests symbolic theme thou tion tradition Troilus and Cressida truth Venus and Adonis Venus's virginity wife Wilson Knight Windsor Wives of Windsor woman women wooing words young