The Works of Shakespeare, Volumen11Macmillan Company, 1904 |
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Página 1
... early men who had the passions and were doing the work of men , but who had the fresh and responsive imagination of child- hood ; who were so closely in touch with nature that the whole world was alive to them in every sight and sound ...
... early men who had the passions and were doing the work of men , but who had the fresh and responsive imagination of child- hood ; who were so closely in touch with nature that the whole world was alive to them in every sight and sound ...
Página 3
... have flowed from the days of a declining theatre at Rome through the confused and largely recordless life of the early Middle Ages , it may safely be assumed that the modern drama began , as 3 The Forerunners of Shakespeare.
... have flowed from the days of a declining theatre at Rome through the confused and largely recordless life of the early Middle Ages , it may safely be assumed that the modern drama began , as 3 The Forerunners of Shakespeare.
Página 4
... early license gave place to the grossest personalities and the cheapest tricks and feats of skill . The mimes , or players , carried this degenerate drama into the provinces , where taste was even less 4 William Shakespeare.
... early license gave place to the grossest personalities and the cheapest tricks and feats of skill . The mimes , or players , carried this degenerate drama into the provinces , where taste was even less 4 William Shakespeare.
Página 7
... early as the fifth century these scenes were reproduced in the churches in living pictures , with music . In this manner the people not only heard the story of the Adoration of the Magi and of the Marriage of Cana , but 7 The ...
... early as the fifth century these scenes were reproduced in the churches in living pictures , with music . In this manner the people not only heard the story of the Adoration of the Magi and of the Marriage of Cana , but 7 The ...
Página 8
... early drama was a succession of mono- logues , but it plainly predicted the mystery drama of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries . There was nothing forced or artificial in the growth of this later and more complete drama ; a ...
... early drama was a succession of mono- logues , but it plainly predicted the mystery drama of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries . There was nothing forced or artificial in the growth of this later and more complete drama ; a ...
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