"Starre of Poets": Discussions of ShakespeareCarnegie Institute of Technology, 1966 - 79 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 6
Página 12
... experience is sweet against the weight of its destructiveness . Setting the qualities in even a fractionally pro - and- con balance frees the speaker's involvement from its obsessiveness , for it suggests willingness to see and include ...
... experience is sweet against the weight of its destructiveness . Setting the qualities in even a fractionally pro - and- con balance frees the speaker's involvement from its obsessiveness , for it suggests willingness to see and include ...
Página 13
... experience which is the subject of the poem is different from the experience which is the poem because the poem supplies a formed consciousness . The ordering and comprehending which convey what may be a wordless experience in words ...
... experience which is the subject of the poem is different from the experience which is the poem because the poem supplies a formed consciousness . The ordering and comprehending which convey what may be a wordless experience in words ...
Página 79
... experience or set of experiences undergone by their creator cannot be established for certain . That they reflect sharp observa- tion and sober reflection seems likely . It seems also likely that one product of that sharp observation ...
... experience or set of experiences undergone by their creator cannot be established for certain . That they reflect sharp observa- tion and sober reflection seems likely . It seems also likely that one product of that sharp observation ...
Contenido
The Sonnets | 1 |
The History Plays | 17 |
The Realms of Gold and the Dark Comedies | 49 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 1 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Achilles Antony and Cleopatra Austin Wright Bassanio Belmont Bottom Carnegie Series character clowns cold couplet Dark Comedies death death-bed Diomedes Dogberry drama Duke fair young Falstaff father Feste flower fool Foolery Forest Fred Sochatoff gives Gloucester Greek Hamlet Hart hath heart heaven Hector Helen Henry IV heroes History Plays honor husband Jack Falstaff judgment Julius Caesar King Henry King John King Lear lady Launcelot Gobbo lines live look lords and owners Macbeth Menelaus Merchant of Venice metaphor mind Oberon Olivia Orsino Othello Pandarus Plutarch poem Portia Prince quatrain realms of gold Richard II Richard the Second riches role Romantic Comedies says scene Shake Shakespeare shines everywhere Shylock Sir John sonnet sophrosyne speaker speare's story sweet Thersites Theseus third quatrain thou three quatrains tion Titania tone Touchstone tragedy tricksy word Troilus and Cressida Trojan Troy Twelfth Night Ulysses William Shakespeare young lovers youth