Shakespearean Criticism YearbookMichele Lee Gale Research International, Limited, 1998 - 420 páginas Presents literary criticism on the plays and poetry of Shakespeare. Critical essays are selected from leading sources, including journals, magazines, books, reviews, diaries, newspapers, pamphlets, and scholarly papers. Includes commentary by Shakespeare's contemporaries as well as a full range of views from later centuries, with an emphasis on contemporary analysis. Includes aesthetic criticism, textual criticism, and criticism of Shakespeare in performance. |
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Página 384
... live twice in it and in my rhyme . " The young man's beauty will live on in verse and in his progeny , and the child's beauty will validate the poetry . A fundamental change in the sequence occurs after sonnet 17 : the argument for ...
... live twice in it and in my rhyme . " The young man's beauty will live on in verse and in his progeny , and the child's beauty will validate the poetry . A fundamental change in the sequence occurs after sonnet 17 : the argument for ...
Página 385
... lives in him- self . . . nor does he live in the beloved , since he is rejected by him " ( Ficino , 55 ) . In the Ficinian terms that the speaker invokes , the threat of death applies not to both lover and beloved , as Shakespeare's ...
... lives in him- self . . . nor does he live in the beloved , since he is rejected by him " ( Ficino , 55 ) . In the Ficinian terms that the speaker invokes , the threat of death applies not to both lover and beloved , as Shakespeare's ...
Página 388
... live is that dying will separate him from his beloved , whom he refuses to abandon alone in a dreadful world . The social satire in the following two sonnets ( 67-68 ) aligns the two men by finding the youth similarly unsuited to live ...
... live is that dying will separate him from his beloved , whom he refuses to abandon alone in a dreadful world . The social satire in the following two sonnets ( 67-68 ) aligns the two men by finding the youth similarly unsuited to live ...
Contenido
Hotspur and the Discourse of Honor | 101 |
Paula Blank Speaking Freely about Richard II | 120 |
Maurice Hunt Shakespeares King Richard III and the Problematics of Tudor Bastardy | 132 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 15 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William ..., Volumen28 Vista de fragmentos - 1984 |
Términos y frases comunes
action Angelo Antipholus argues audience Aufidius bastardy becomes body Bolingbroke calls character Comedy of Errors consolation context Coppélia Coriolanus critics death Desdemona desire discourse Dollimore domestic dramatic Dromio Duke Duke's Edward Elizabethan Emilia England English erotic essay Falstaff fantasy female gender grotesque Hamlet hath Henry Henry IV Hermione Hermione's Hippolyta honor Hotspur human Iago Iago's identity imagination King lago language Leontes lines London lover Macbeth male Marcius marriage means metaphor Montaigne mother nature Neoplatonic Noble Kinsmen Oberon Othello Pericles play's poem political Press production Prospero queen reading relation Renaissance rhetorical Richard Richard II role scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's play Silvia Sinfield social sonnets speak speaker speare speare's speech stage story suggests tells Tempest theatrical thee Theseus thou tion Titania tragedy Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night voice Winter's Tale woman women words York