Some Shakespearean Themes1960 |
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Pagina 26
... experience but from books . It is of course impossible to make a rigid distinction between ' literature ' and ' experience ' ; what a man reads , if he has his wits about him , is part of his experience . Yet when we consider the early ...
... experience but from books . It is of course impossible to make a rigid distinction between ' literature ' and ' experience ' ; what a man reads , if he has his wits about him , is part of his experience . Yet when we consider the early ...
Pagina 49
... experience , though only in such a way that experience - what is intimately known - feels itself able to follow in its tracks ; and both Sonnet CXVI ( ' Let me not to the marriage of true minds ' ) and Sonnet CXXIV ( ' If my dear love ...
... experience , though only in such a way that experience - what is intimately known - feels itself able to follow in its tracks ; and both Sonnet CXVI ( ' Let me not to the marriage of true minds ' ) and Sonnet CXXIV ( ' If my dear love ...
Pagina 66
... experience came to him was soaked in feelings and shot through with perceptions that crystallized out as the themes of appear- ance , death , and so on . But the condition of the defining that his art is , was that it should remain as ...
... experience came to him was soaked in feelings and shot through with perceptions that crystallized out as the themes of appear- ance , death , and so on . But the condition of the defining that his art is , was that it should remain as ...
Cuprins
Foreword | 9 |
First Observations | 26 |
The Sonnets and King Henry IV | 45 |
Drept de autor | |
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Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Some Shakespearean Themes and An Approach to ‘Hamlet’: And An Approach to ... Lionel Charles Knights Previzualizare limitată - 1966 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
Achilles action Antony and Cleopatra appearance Arden edition aspects aware Bardolph CHAPTER character comedy consciousness Cordelia Coriolanus course criticism death defined doth dramatic earlier plays Edmund Elizabethan embodied essay evil evoked experience F. R. Leavis fact Falstaff feel Fool force give Gloucester Goneril Greek hath heart Henry VI honour human nature I. A. Richards imagery images imaginative insistence interest irony kind King Henry King Lear Lear's lines living Macbeth man's meaning mind moral murder Nature's passage passion pattern peace philosophic phrase play's poet poetic poetry political present public world question realism reality Regan relation revealed Richard scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare significance simply Sonnets speak speech suggestion T. S. Eliot thee themes things thou thought time's tion tragedies Traversi Troilus and Cressida Troilus's truth Ulysses unnatural vision Wheel of Fire whole Wilson Knight words