English Shakesperian Criticism in the Eighteenth CenturyH.W. Wilson Company, 1932 - 300 sider |
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Side 19
... accept The Tempest as an early effort , because it is " as perfect in its kind , as almost anything we have of his . " He appears mildly pleased that it observes the Unities more than is Shakespeare's custom , but it must be placed to ...
... accept The Tempest as an early effort , because it is " as perfect in its kind , as almost anything we have of his . " He appears mildly pleased that it observes the Unities more than is Shakespeare's custom , but it must be placed to ...
Side 20
... accept the First Folio division of the plays into comedies and tragedies , a classification questioned by Johnson . His observation that the histori- cal dramas may also be placed with the tragedies is partly correct , although it does ...
... accept the First Folio division of the plays into comedies and tragedies , a classification questioned by Johnson . His observation that the histori- cal dramas may also be placed with the tragedies is partly correct , although it does ...
Side 58
... accept the explanation , we must admit that it is somewhat off the beaten track . Previous critics made Shakespeare's ignorance respon- sible for his defects and blunders . Pope lays a large part of this burden at the door of the ...
... accept the explanation , we must admit that it is somewhat off the beaten track . Previous critics made Shakespeare's ignorance respon- sible for his defects and blunders . Pope lays a large part of this burden at the door of the ...
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John Dennis 16571734 | 5 |
Nicholas Rowe 16741718 | 13 |
Charles Gildon 16651724 | 23 |
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English Shakesperian Criticism in the Eighteenth Century Herbert Spencer Robinson Utdragsvisning - 1968 |
English Shakesperian Criticism in the Eighteenth Century Herbert Spencer Robinson Utdragsvisning - 1968 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
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