The Works of Shakespeare, Band 11Macmillan and Company, limited, 1903 |
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... entirely real ; everybody knew that a group of Tyrrhenian sailors had seized him as he sat on a rock on the seashore , bound him with withes , and carried him to the deck of their tiny piratical craft ; and everybody knew also that the ...
... entirely real ; everybody knew that a group of Tyrrhenian sailors had seized him as he sat on a rock on the seashore , bound him with withes , and carried him to the deck of their tiny piratical craft ; and everybody knew also that the ...
Seite 11
... entirely congru- ous with the deepest piety of the time that grotesque figures , monstrous gargoyles , broadly humorous carv- ings on miserere stalls , should be part of the structure of those vast cathedrals which are the most sublime ...
... entirely congru- ous with the deepest piety of the time that grotesque figures , monstrous gargoyles , broadly humorous carv- ings on miserere stalls , should be part of the structure of those vast cathedrals which are the most sublime ...
Seite 14
... entirely in the hands of men ; no women appeared on the stage until after the time of Shakespeare ; the female characters were taken by boys . The transition from the Moralities to the fully de- veloped play was gradual , and was not ...
... entirely in the hands of men ; no women appeared on the stage until after the time of Shakespeare ; the female characters were taken by boys . The transition from the Moralities to the fully de- veloped play was gradual , and was not ...
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... entirely subordinate to the end of furnishing the material he wished to use ; it was vital rather than exact ; it was used freely , without any pretension to thoroughness ; it served immediate ends with the highest intelligence , and is ...
... entirely subordinate to the end of furnishing the material he wished to use ; it was vital rather than exact ; it was used freely , without any pretension to thoroughness ; it served immediate ends with the highest intelligence , and is ...
Seite 41
... entirely normal fact con- cerning boys growing up in unliterary times and rural communities . That these boys subsequently became famous does not change the conditions under which they grew up . CHAPTER III SHAKESPEARE'S COUNTRY THE ...
... entirely normal fact con- cerning boys growing up in unliterary times and rural communities . That these boys subsequently became famous does not change the conditions under which they grew up . CHAPTER III SHAKESPEARE'S COUNTRY THE ...
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