Shakespeare Criticism from the Beginnings to L765: Six Lectures Delivered at the Presidency College Under the Auspices of the University of MadrasBlackie & son limited, 1932 - 85 sider |
Inni boken
Resultat 1-3 av 6
Side 19
... French classical drama became subservient to rules . In England , after the Restoration , when the new age had definitely dawned , conformity to the rules was the only correct practice . 1 But we need not anticipate . The triumph of ...
... French classical drama became subservient to rules . In England , after the Restoration , when the new age had definitely dawned , conformity to the rules was the only correct practice . 1 But we need not anticipate . The triumph of ...
Side 40
... French classical drama and the English drama of his own time ; the contemporary drama and the great Eliza- bethan drama . As many of these problems , in the manner in which they presented themselves to Dryden and his contemporaries ...
... French classical drama and the English drama of his own time ; the contemporary drama and the great Eliza- bethan drama . As many of these problems , in the manner in which they presented themselves to Dryden and his contemporaries ...
Side 58
... French critics , the only tragedy of our language . " In his appendix to the History of King James the First , in a passage of splendid prose , Hume refers to Shakespeare as a prodigy when taken with all the limitations of the rude age ...
... French critics , the only tragedy of our language . " In his appendix to the History of King James the First , in a passage of splendid prose , Hume refers to Shakespeare as a prodigy when taken with all the limitations of the rude age ...
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
Addison admiration ancient Aristotle Beaumont and Fletcher Ben Jonson bethan Betterton BLACKIE C. H. HERFORD character classical comic contemporary Corneille critic of Shakespeare Davenant drama dramatist Dryden edition of Shakespeare editor Elizabethan age Elizabethan writers emendation England English Essay excellent Falstaff faults Folio genius of Shakespeare genuine Hamlet Henry Herford history of Shakespeare honour human humour humour comedies interesting Johnson Julius Cæsar Last Age Lear learned LECTURE literary literature manner master Milton modern nature neo-classicism notes observation Othello Pepys plays of Shakespeare poem poet poetry Pope Pope's praises Shakespeare preface Presidency College Professor prologue published references to Shakespeare rehandling remarks Restoration romantic comedies rules Rymer says scenes Seneca the Elder sense seventeenth century Shake Shakespeare criticism Shakespeare's genius Shakespeare's language Shakespeare's plays Shakespeare's reputation singularly speare speare's stage Stratford taste Tempest theatre Theobald three unities tion tragedy unities verse Voltaire Warton writings wrote