Jonson and Elizabethan Comedy: Essays in Dramatic RhetoricHuntington Library, 1978 - 351 strán (strany) |
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Strana ix
... seen with a discern- ing eye , is not as homogeneous as literary historians lead us to think , we do little justice to the special pleasures of his comedies if we iron out the differences between them , being content to describe them as ...
... seen with a discern- ing eye , is not as homogeneous as literary historians lead us to think , we do little justice to the special pleasures of his comedies if we iron out the differences between them , being content to describe them as ...
Strana 43
... seen another God beside thee which doth so to him that waiteth for him " ( 64 : 4 ) . For sixteenth - century readers , these passages were cross refer- enced to St. Paul's similar promise in 1 Cor . 2 : 9 with the " same kindle of ...
... seen another God beside thee which doth so to him that waiteth for him " ( 64 : 4 ) . For sixteenth - century readers , these passages were cross refer- enced to St. Paul's similar promise in 1 Cor . 2 : 9 with the " same kindle of ...
Strana 293
... seen , but the charm of his catalogs persist and seem to have a similar cumulative effect , although each detail has its intrinsic value . One final example , from a masque performed in 1621 , two years before the estimated date of " A ...
... seen , but the charm of his catalogs persist and seem to have a similar cumulative effect , although each detail has its intrinsic value . One final example , from a masque performed in 1621 , two years before the estimated date of " A ...
Obsah
Jonson Shakespeare and the Divided Audience | 1 |
Dissimulation and Symbiosis | 24 |
Comedy of Admiration | 35 |
Autorské práva | |
9 zvyšných častí nezobrazených
Časté výrazy a frázy
action actors admiration appears audience Bartholomew beauty becomes beginning better called characters comedy comes comic common compass court critics delight describes dialogue drama dream effect Elizabethan English epigram eyes face Fair feelings figure finally fools force give hand heart hope human Humor idea ideal imagination imitation important interpretation John Jonson keep kind Lady language later learned less light lines live look lovers Lyly masque matter meaning mind mock moral nature never perfect perhaps Plautus play pleasure poems poet poetry praise present reason remarks Revels rhetoric Sapho satire says scene seems seen sense Shakespeare similar social soul speak speech spirit stage style suggest theater theory things thought true truth turn understand virtue Volpone wants whole wonder