King Henry the FifthHoughton, Mifflin, 1905 - 147 strán (strany) |
Vyhľadávanie v obsahu knihy
Výsledky 1 - 5 z 17.
Strana 3
... Prologue to Act V. Chorus has been telling of the welcome of the King to London after Agin- Date of the court ; he goes on - As , by a lower but loving likelihood , Were now the general of our gracious empress , As in good time he may ...
... Prologue to Act V. Chorus has been telling of the welcome of the King to London after Agin- Date of the court ; he goes on - As , by a lower but loving likelihood , Were now the general of our gracious empress , As in good time he may ...
Strana 8
... Prologue to Act I. The appeal was not to the eye but to the imagination of the audience ; and it was made by stirring and spirited verse , well pronounced by the actor . How important a good elocution and delivery was we may 1 A summary ...
... Prologue to Act I. The appeal was not to the eye but to the imagination of the audience ; and it was made by stirring and spirited verse , well pronounced by the actor . How important a good elocution and delivery was we may 1 A summary ...
Strana 14
... prologue , as in Henry VIII , or an epilogue , as in the second part of Henry IV . In Henry V there are choruses between the acts called prologues to the acts . In Pericles there are choruses between the acts and also in the middle of ...
... prologue , as in Henry VIII , or an epilogue , as in the second part of Henry IV . In Henry V there are choruses between the acts called prologues to the acts . In Pericles there are choruses between the acts and also in the middle of ...
Strana 15
... prologue to Act I urges the audience to take the play as a stimulus to the imagination rather than as an adequate reproduction of what has taken place . So in the prologues to Act III , 11. 33 , 34 ; IV , 11. 49-53 ; V , 1-6 . These ...
... prologue to Act I urges the audience to take the play as a stimulus to the imagination rather than as an adequate reproduction of what has taken place . So in the prologues to Act III , 11. 33 , 34 ; IV , 11. 49-53 ; V , 1-6 . These ...
Strana 19
... Prologue . An apology for the attempt to present such great things with such small means . ( See p . 15. ) Act I. The Causes of the War . Scene i . The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of Ely , in a conversation upon the ...
... Prologue . An apology for the attempt to present such great things with such small means . ( See p . 15. ) Act I. The Causes of the War . Scene i . The Archbishop of Canterbury and the Bishop of Ely , in a conversation upon the ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
Agincourt Alarum Alençon Alice army Aunchient Bard Bardolph Bates battle Battle of Agincourt behold blood brother Cant Chorus Constable Constable of France cousin crowns Dauphin dear Devil Dolphin doth dramatic Duke of Burgundy dukedoms Elizabethan England English Enter KING HENRY Exeunt Exit eyes fair Falstaff Fluellen French give GLOUCESTER glove Gower grace hand Harfleur Harry hath hear heart Henry IV Henry's herald Holinshed honour horse Host humour Jamy Kate Kath Katharine King of France King's leek liege look Lord Macedon Macmorris majesty means mercy Midsummer Night's Dream mock Montjoy never night noble peace Pist play poetry pray pridge princes Prologue ransom rhetorical Romeo and Juliet Salique Scene Scroop Shakespeare soldier soul speak speech spirit sword tell Ternois thee thine things thou treason unto wear words