The Works of Shakespeare, Volumen11Macmillan and Company, limited, 1903 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 45
Página 3
... kind of literary protoplasm because several literary forms were implicit in it and were later developed out of it , was a free , spontaneous , natural act of worship ; it was also a genuine drama , which unfolded by easy grada- tions ...
... kind of literary protoplasm because several literary forms were implicit in it and were later developed out of it , was a free , spontaneous , natural act of worship ; it was also a genuine drama , which unfolded by easy grada- tions ...
Página 4
... kind of drama inevitable in every age . When the influence of Menander , modified and adapted to Roman taste by Terence , Plautus , and their successors , was exhausted , farces , with music , pantomime , and humorous dialogue , largely ...
... kind of drama inevitable in every age . When the influence of Menander , modified and adapted to Roman taste by Terence , Plautus , and their successors , was exhausted , farces , with music , pantomime , and humorous dialogue , largely ...
Página 5
... kind of entertainment for which it asked ; then , as now , the players were bent on pleasing the people . The Church , having other ends in view , tried to purify the general taste by purifying the amusements of the people , and in the ...
... kind of entertainment for which it asked ; then , as now , the players were bent on pleasing the people . The Church , having other ends in view , tried to purify the general taste by purifying the amusements of the people , and in the ...
Página 10
... kind of teaching . The drama in the Garden of Eden was presented with uncompromising realism , Adam and Eve appearing in appropriate attire ; the devil played a great and effective part , furnishing endless amusement by his buffoonery ...
... kind of teaching . The drama in the Garden of Eden was presented with uncompromising realism , Adam and Eve appearing in appropriate attire ; the devil played a great and effective part , furnishing endless amusement by his buffoonery ...
Página 14
... kind . The parts were 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 ...
... kind . The parts were 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 ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
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