Studies of Shakspere: Forming a Companion Volume to the National Edition of the Pictorial ShakspereCharles Knight, 1851 - 560 pages |
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Page 14
... imagination , and a lie , are the same thing is very characteristic : - " The writers of our time are so led away with vain glory that their only endeavour is to pleasure the hu- mour of men , and rather with vanity to con- tent their ...
... imagination , and a lie , are the same thing is very characteristic : - " The writers of our time are so led away with vain glory that their only endeavour is to pleasure the hu- mour of men , and rather with vanity to con- tent their ...
Page 17
... imagination to con- jure you to believe for true what he writeth : but even for his entry calleth the sweet Muses to ... imaginative ground - plat of a profitable invention . " Gosson , as we have seen , attacks the Stage , | not only ...
... imagination to con- jure you to believe for true what he writeth : but even for his entry calleth the sweet Muses to ... imaginative ground - plat of a profitable invention . " Gosson , as we have seen , attacks the Stage , | not only ...
Page 24
... imagination of the audience by speech was to be made more intelligible by a sign - painting pantomime . Nothing could be more characteristic of a very rude state of art , almost the rudest , than the dumb - shows which introduce each ...
... imagination of the audience by speech was to be made more intelligible by a sign - painting pantomime . Nothing could be more characteristic of a very rude state of art , almost the rudest , than the dumb - shows which introduce each ...
Page 44
... imagination has created . They must be placed by the poet's power of combination in the various relations which they must maintain through a long and sometimes complicated action : he must see and heightened , and the catastrophe natu ...
... imagination has created . They must be placed by the poet's power of combination in the various relations which they must maintain through a long and sometimes complicated action : he must see and heightened , and the catastrophe natu ...
Page 46
... imagination , take Tamora out of the class of ordinary women . It is in her mouth that we find , for the most part ... imaginative conception of the speaker , that she was to personate Re- venge : - " Know thou , sad man , I am not ...
... imagination , take Tamora out of the class of ordinary women . It is in her mouth that we find , for the most part ... imaginative conception of the speaker , that she was to personate Re- venge : - " Know thou , sad man , I am not ...
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Studies of Shakspere: A Companion Volume to the National Edition (...) Charles Knight No preview available - 1851 |
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action amongst appears Arden audience beauty believe Brutus Cæsar called character comedy Comedy of Errors copy criticism Cymbeline death doth doubt drama Duke edition English exhibit eyes Falstaff father fear Fletcher folio give Hamlet hath heart Henry Henry IV honour John Jonson Julius Cæsar King labour lady Lear live Locrine look lord Love's Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth Malone master Merry Wives mind nature never night noble Noble Kinsmen opinion original Othello passage passion play players poem poet poet's poetical poetry praise Prince principle printed produced quarto Queen racter Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet says scarcely scene Shak Shakspere Shakspere's Sonnets soul speak spere spirit stage Steevens story sweet tell thee thine thing thou art thought Timon tion Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida true truth unto verse words writer written