Characters of Shakespeare's PlaysWiley and Putnam, 1845 - 229 sidor |
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Sida xii
... style , not very attractive to the English reader , and in bringing illustrations from particular pas- sages of the plays themselves , of which Schlegel's work , from the extensiveness of his plan , did not admit . We will at the same ...
... style , not very attractive to the English reader , and in bringing illustrations from particular pas- sages of the plays themselves , of which Schlegel's work , from the extensiveness of his plan , did not admit . We will at the same ...
Sida xiv
... style of love . He paints in a most inimitable manner , the gradual progress from the first origin . He gives , ' as Lessing says , ' a living picture of all the most minute and secret artifices by which a feeling steals into our souls ...
... style of love . He paints in a most inimitable manner , the gradual progress from the first origin . He gives , ' as Lessing says , ' a living picture of all the most minute and secret artifices by which a feeling steals into our souls ...
Sida xxi
... style . Johnson wrote a kind of rhyming prose , in which he was compelled as much to finish the different clauses of his sentences , and to balance one period against another , as the writer of he- roic verse is to keep to lines of ten ...
... style . Johnson wrote a kind of rhyming prose , in which he was compelled as much to finish the different clauses of his sentences , and to balance one period against another , as the writer of he- roic verse is to keep to lines of ten ...
Sida xxii
... style than the consistency or truth of his opinions . If Dr. Johnson's opi- nion was right , the following observations on Shakspeare's Plays must be greatly exaggerated , if not ridiculous . If he was wrong , what has been said may ...
... style than the consistency or truth of his opinions . If Dr. Johnson's opi- nion was right , the following observations on Shakspeare's Plays must be greatly exaggerated , if not ridiculous . If he was wrong , what has been said may ...
Sida 15
... style , the throes and labor which run through the expression , and from defects will turn them into beauties . " So fair and foul a day I have not seen , " & c . " Such welcome and unwelcome news together . " " Men's lives are like the ...
... style , the throes and labor which run through the expression , and from defects will turn them into beauties . " So fair and foul a day I have not seen , " & c . " Such welcome and unwelcome news together . " " Men's lives are like the ...
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Characters of Shakespeare's Plays: & Lectures on the English Poets William Hazlitt Ingen förhandsgranskning - 2015 |
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admiration affections Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson blood breath Cæsar Caliban character comedy Coriolanus critic CYMBELINE D'Ol death delight Desdemona dost doth dramatic Duke effeminacy Endymion equal Eumenides eyes Falstaff fancy fear feeling fire fool fortune friends genius give grace hand hast hath hear heart heaven Henry honour human Iago imagination Jeremy Taylor Jonson king kiss lady Lear learning live look lord Macbeth MALVOLIO manner MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM mind moral nature never night noble Othello passages passion person pity play pleasure poet poetical poetry pride prince quincunxes racter rich Richard Richard III scene seems Sejanus sense sentiment Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's sleep soul speak speech spirit striking style sweet tell tender thee things thou art thought tion Titus Andronicus tragedy true truth unto wife words writers youth