The Works of Shakespeare ..., כרך 1 |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 26
עמוד x
to by mere recollections of delight ; . . . the poet may have left the manuscript in a more unfinished and illegible state , from a sense of something ungenial and unattractive in the subject - matter and action of the play .
to by mere recollections of delight ; . . . the poet may have left the manuscript in a more unfinished and illegible state , from a sense of something ungenial and unattractive in the subject - matter and action of the play .
עמוד xi
This is not the place to discuss the several claims of these three plays : the battle has been fought out , and critics are now almost unanimous in declaring that All's Well that Ends Well is , in all probability , the play that Meres ...
This is not the place to discuss the several claims of these three plays : the battle has been fought out , and critics are now almost unanimous in declaring that All's Well that Ends Well is , in all probability , the play that Meres ...
עמוד xv
distinct styles , the one reminding one of the earliest plays , the other of the great plays of the period of tragedy ; that the fourfold recurrence of the proverb " All's well that ends well ” in the text of the play , and the apparent ...
distinct styles , the one reminding one of the earliest plays , the other of the great plays of the period of tragedy ; that the fourfold recurrence of the proverb " All's well that ends well ” in the text of the play , and the apparent ...
מה אומרים אנשים - כתיבת ביקורת
לא מצאנו ביקורות במקומות הרגילים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
answer Bertram bring called Capell Collier common conj conjecture Count Countess court drum Dyce editors Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fair father follow fortune French friends give grace hand Hanmer hath hear heart heaven Helena Henry hold honour hope husband Italy Johnson King knave lady Lafeu leave letter live look lost madam Malone marry meaning mother nature never night occurs omitted Parolles passage perhaps phrase play poor Pope pray probably quotes reason reference ring Rowe SCENE Second Lord seems sense serve Shakespeare Sold speak stand Steevens suggests suppose sweet tell thank thee Theobald thing thou thought true truth unto virginity virtue Walker wife woman worthy write young