The History of English Soliloquy: Aeschylus to ShakespeareUniversity Press of America, 1985 - 139 pagini Provides a thorough survey of the history of the soliloquy, from the earliest forms found on pre-Biblical Canaanite tablets through the heights of Shakespeare. Shows how Elizabethan soliloquy evolved out of its ancient forerunners, and that Shakespeare dominates soliloquy. Of particular interest to students and scholars of language, drama and Shakespeare. |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 3 din 27
Pagina 47
... speaks : Alas ! that I had no good fellow here To bear me company , and laugh at this gear : This game was well found . ( Part the Second ) · As the plot unfolds in ensuing lines , Envy's little speech operates as a plot- link to herald ...
... speaks : Alas ! that I had no good fellow here To bear me company , and laugh at this gear : This game was well found . ( Part the Second ) · As the plot unfolds in ensuing lines , Envy's little speech operates as a plot- link to herald ...
Pagina 54
... speaks almost entirely in the first per- son , describing his own odious actions past and present , more like the vice in an early morality . Two other soliloquies in Magnificence demand attention here as to dis- tinctiveness of form ...
... speaks almost entirely in the first per- son , describing his own odious actions past and present , more like the vice in an early morality . Two other soliloquies in Magnificence demand attention here as to dis- tinctiveness of form ...
Pagina 58
... speaks a brief lament soliloquy a few pages farther on : O Jesu ! what may this mean ? My goods are spent and wasted away ! Also my men are from me clean ; I see them not this seven nights ' day . As long as I might spend and pay , They ...
... speaks a brief lament soliloquy a few pages farther on : O Jesu ! what may this mean ? My goods are spent and wasted away ! Also my men are from me clean ; I see them not this seven nights ' day . As long as I might spend and pay , They ...
Cuprins
The Mysteries | 25 |
Morality Drama | 45 |
Shakespearean Structures and Language | 99 |
Drept de autor | |
1 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
The History of English Soliloquy: Aeschylus to Shakespeare Lloyd A. Skiffington Vizualizare fragmente - 1985 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Aaron action Aeschylus allegorical alliteration apostrophe audience Belial Caliban's century chapter character choragos chorus cited classical Clemen comedy comic conscience Counterfeit Countenance crown death declamation devils diction doth earlier early morality Elizabethan English soliloquy Envy Euripides evil example exemplifies fiend figurative Gobbo Grand Homily Greek Hamlet hath Heaven Henry Henry VI homiletic honor Iago iloquy imagery intermediate and late Jasper Heywood Juliet Juventus King lament language late moralities later Launcelot lines live London Lord Macbeth Magnificence medieval soliloquy metaphor Mini-homily monologue Morality Plays morality soliloquy mystery soliloquy opening personae Plautus plot exposition plot-action primitive prologue psychomachia rhetorical Richard Richard III role-action Roman Romeo Satan says scene Second Shepherds Seneca sermon Seven Against Thebes Shakespeare Shakespearean soliloquy sophistication Sophocles speaker speaks stage structural theatre thee Thespis thou Thyestes tion tone Tragedy types utterance vaunt Vice villain word-play words York yower
Referințe la această carte
Adapting to the Stage: Theatre and the Work of Henry James Christopher Greenwood Vizualizare fragmente - 2000 |