The Works of Shakespeare, Band 11Macmillan and Company, limited, 1903 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 24
Seite 16
... classical influence which had swept Europe like a tide , but he took his materials from the life about him , and he used good native speech . He had learned from the Latin comedy how to construct both a plot and a play , and his ...
... classical influence which had swept Europe like a tide , but he took his materials from the life about him , and he used good native speech . He had learned from the Latin comedy how to construct both a plot and a play , and his ...
Seite 17
... classical literatures was putting its impress on men of taste and culture . Italy , by virtue of its immense service in the recovery of classical thought and art , and in the production of great works of its own in literature , painting ...
... classical literatures was putting its impress on men of taste and culture . Italy , by virtue of its immense service in the recovery of classical thought and art , and in the production of great works of its own in literature , painting ...
Seite 18
... classical stage for a time threatened the integrity of English art , but in the end the vigour of the English mind asserted itself ; if the classical influence had won the day , Ben Jonson would have secured a higher place , but ...
... classical stage for a time threatened the integrity of English art , but in the end the vigour of the English mind asserted itself ; if the classical influence had won the day , Ben Jonson would have secured a higher place , but ...
Seite 19
... classical influence ; they could hardly be subdued by it . In the excess of action , the rush of incident , the swift accumulation of horrors , which characterize this sanguinary play , Seneca would have found few suggestions of his own ...
... classical influence ; they could hardly be subdued by it . In the excess of action , the rush of incident , the swift accumulation of horrors , which characterize this sanguinary play , Seneca would have found few suggestions of his own ...
Seite 38
... classical tradition in the English drama . Shake- speare was neither by instinct nor opportunity a scholar in the sense in which Ben Jonson was a scholar ; but he had considerable familiarity with four languages ; he had access to many ...
... classical tradition in the English drama . Shake- speare was neither by instinct nor opportunity a scholar in the sense in which Ben Jonson was a scholar ; but he had considerable familiarity with four languages ; he had access to many ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action actors appeared artistic beauty Ben Jonson brought century character charm chronicle plays church classical comedy contemporaries creative deep drama dramatist earlier England English experience expression fact Falstaff fate feeling force fortunes freedom friends genius Globe Theatre Hamlet hand harmony Henry human humour imagination influence insight instinct interest Italian John Shakespeare Jonson Julius Cæsar kind King later literary literature lived London Love's Labour's Lost lyrical Macbeth manner Marlowe material mind mood moral nature ness noble passion period play players playwright plot poem poet poet's poetic poetry popular presented probably Puritan Queen Rape of Lucrece romance Romeo and Juliet Shake significance Sonnets speare speare's speech spirit stage story Stratford taste temper theatre thought tion Titus Andronicus touch tradition tragedy tragic Venus and Adonis verse vital Warwickshire writing written young