Renaissance PapersSoutheastern Renaissance Conference, 1961 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 10
Página 10
... scene after scene of an absorbing drama . As Professor De Selincourt says : This world of faery land is wide enough to embrace all that was most precious to Spenser in his own experience . With its chivalrous combats and its graceful ...
... scene after scene of an absorbing drama . As Professor De Selincourt says : This world of faery land is wide enough to embrace all that was most precious to Spenser in his own experience . With its chivalrous combats and its graceful ...
Página 47
... scene following the murder of Duncan are especially mentioned in reports of his acting ; and in the banquet scene he effectively ex- pressed the terror of the supernatural . As his interpretation matured , however , he made Macbeth less ...
... scene following the murder of Duncan are especially mentioned in reports of his acting ; and in the banquet scene he effectively ex- pressed the terror of the supernatural . As his interpretation matured , however , he made Macbeth less ...
Página 53
... scene following the " Naught's had , all's spent " soliloquy , when she gives " striking indications of sensibility , nay tenderness and sympathy . " Mrs. Siddons imagines Lady Macbeth tortured by a guilty conscience to the extent that ...
... scene following the " Naught's had , all's spent " soliloquy , when she gives " striking indications of sensibility , nay tenderness and sympathy . " Mrs. Siddons imagines Lady Macbeth tortured by a guilty conscience to the extent that ...
Contenido
A SIDNEY Knowles | 11 |
CHARLES E MOUNTS | 19 |
1959 | 27 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 6 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
actors actress ancients Antony appears Arbaces Aristotle Aristotle's Bacon beasts Bessus Bird century Commedia critics Dante Dante's divine Donne's Earl of Essex essay Ethics evidence Faerie Queene feel Frances Walsingham Garrick gentle savage giant Graves Graves's Guicciardini Hamlet hath Helena Faucit high-minded honor human Ibid idea ideal tragic hero imagination interpretation James Sheridan Knowles Jonson Kemble King L'Allegro Lady Macbeth Lear learned Leicester lines literary lives London love poems lovers Lubber Fiend lust Macbeth's character Mardonius Mellin Mellin de Saint-Gelais Michael Redgrave Milton mind moral nature never nightingale noble Panthea passions Penseroso Philomel Philomela play poet poet's poetic poetry Procne prose reason Renaissance Papers Ricordi Saint says scene seems Shakespeare Shakespeare's tragic hero Siddons Sidney Sidney's Silence sister song sonnet soul Spenser suggest symbolic Tereus thee theme things thou Tigranes Timber tion tragedy tragic hero truth unseen VIII virtues words writing