The World & Art of ShakespeareD. Davey, 1967 - 285 pagini |
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Pagina 56
... earlier days , nor could the Church retain the same kind of power as when it had served as sole and unquestioned intermediary between an ignorant and superstitious populace and its God . The abandoning of the feudal demarcation of ...
... earlier days , nor could the Church retain the same kind of power as when it had served as sole and unquestioned intermediary between an ignorant and superstitious populace and its God . The abandoning of the feudal demarcation of ...
Pagina 58
... earlier times that the end of the world was at hand . Public events such as changes of dynasty , plots and party factionalism , recollections and fears of civil war and rebellion , affect men's actions and behaviour and condition the ...
... earlier times that the end of the world was at hand . Public events such as changes of dynasty , plots and party factionalism , recollections and fears of civil war and rebellion , affect men's actions and behaviour and condition the ...
Pagina 253
... earlier English Chronicle Plays - are more closely related than any other group of plays that he wrote . Despite the great differences between the four plays that constitute the group , there are an enormous number of resemblances which ...
... earlier English Chronicle Plays - are more closely related than any other group of plays that he wrote . Despite the great differences between the four plays that constitute the group , there are an enormous number of resemblances which ...
Cuprins
SHAKESPEARE AND THE DRAMATIC TRADITION | 12 |
THE ELIZABETHAN THEATRE | 25 |
IDOLA THEATRI | 38 |
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
accepted action actors Antony appear attitude audience awareness becomes beginning bring Caesar called century character Christian Cleopatra close comedy contrast conventions corrupt court critics daughter death demand drama earlier effect Elizabethan England English evil example expression fact fall Falstaff father feeling finally follow fool friends give Hamlet hand hath Henry hero honour human important indicate Italy killed kind king later leads Lear less live lovers means mind moral murder nature never noble once opening Othello passion patterns performed Plautus play plot presented reason referred rejection represented revealed revenge Richard romantic scene sense serve Shakespeare shows speak speech stage stresses symbolic theatre theme things thou tragedy Troilus true turn values virtue whole wife
Referințe la această carte
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: King Henry IV, part 2. 1940 William Shakespeare Nu există previzualizare disponibilă - 1977 |