Studies of Shakspere: Forming a Companion Volume to the National Edition of the Pictorial ShakspereCharles Knight, 1851 - 560 pages |
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Page 43
... feeling reminds him that some repose must be given ; but he is not sufficiently confident of this , and what he does in this regard is of little power . The personages of the piece are not merely hea- thens , but most of them embittered ...
... feeling reminds him that some repose must be given ; but he is not sufficiently confident of this , and what he does in this regard is of little power . The personages of the piece are not merely hea- thens , but most of them embittered ...
Page 55
... feeling the in- competency of his fellow - labourer , he seems to have assumed almost the entire manage- ment of the remainder , nearly the whole of the third , fourth , and fifth acts bearing in- 66 written ? By no means . We agree ...
... feeling the in- competency of his fellow - labourer , he seems to have assumed almost the entire manage- ment of the remainder , nearly the whole of the third , fourth , and fifth acts bearing in- 66 written ? By no means . We agree ...
Page 71
... feel certain that he is the Timon of Shakspere's own conception . He is as graceful as he is generous ; his prodigality is without the * The Palace of Pleasure , ' in which the story of Timon is found , was first published in 1575 ...
... feel certain that he is the Timon of Shakspere's own conception . He is as graceful as he is generous ; his prodigality is without the * The Palace of Pleasure , ' in which the story of Timon is found , was first published in 1575 ...
Page 74
... feel no interest in either event . Ulrici has noticed the uncertain connexion of this drama as a whole , particu- larly in the scene before us , " where it re- mains quite unknown who is the unfortunate friend for whom Alcibiades ...
... feel no interest in either event . Ulrici has noticed the uncertain connexion of this drama as a whole , particu- larly in the scene before us , " where it re- mains quite unknown who is the unfortunate friend for whom Alcibiades ...
Page 77
... feeling , mingling with the terror which he produces by his denunciations of his daughters ; but , in ' Ti- mon , ' the poet has not once sought to move our pity : by throwing him into an attitude of undiscriminating hostility to the ...
... feeling , mingling with the terror which he produces by his denunciations of his daughters ; but , in ' Ti- mon , ' the poet has not once sought to move our pity : by throwing him into an attitude of undiscriminating hostility to the ...
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Studies of Shakspere: A Companion Volume to the National Edition (...) Charles Knight No preview available - 1851 |
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