Sydney Studies in English. Volume 08, 1982-3University of Sydney, 1978 - 128 עמודים |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-3 מתוך 11
עמוד 10
... expression . There is no necessary correspondence , in short , between the way a part is played and the disposition of the player : " one may smile , and smile , and be a villain " . Hamlet seems to expect both too little and too much ...
... expression . There is no necessary correspondence , in short , between the way a part is played and the disposition of the player : " one may smile , and smile , and be a villain " . Hamlet seems to expect both too little and too much ...
עמוד 43
... expression alludes deliberately to the ending of Wordsworth's Ode , in which the " glory and the dream " are replaced by " thoughts that spring Out of human suffering " , and by awareness of " the human heart by which we live " .15 ...
... expression alludes deliberately to the ending of Wordsworth's Ode , in which the " glory and the dream " are replaced by " thoughts that spring Out of human suffering " , and by awareness of " the human heart by which we live " .15 ...
עמוד 63
... expression of grief at the dawdling life she was obliged to lead breakfasting from nine till ten chatting till eleven , the day began when half over ... who ever is strong enough or can have some of their way and lives in the country ...
... expression of grief at the dawdling life she was obliged to lead breakfasting from nine till ten chatting till eleven , the day began when half over ... who ever is strong enough or can have some of their way and lives in the country ...
תוכן
Mirrors | 3 |
ROBERT W WILLIAMS Fate and the Narrative | 23 |
Keatss | 40 |
זכויות יוצרים | |
4 קטעים אחרים שאינם מוצגים
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
Alexander Pope audience beauty Belinda Casebook central movement charm chastity Christopher Bentley Clarissa's speech Clarke's Claudius Conrad contrast Critical death Dr Leavis dramatic dream edited English epic Eternity F. R. Leavis Fall of Hyperion Fate Fitzgerald Floss G. A. Wilkes game of Ombre Gatsby George Eliot Gertrude Hamlet Hamlet plays Heart of Darkness Honour human idea imagery ironies John Keats Keats Keats's king king's Kurtz letter lines literary live lock London look Madame Récamier Maggie Maggie's Marlow Mary Clarke meaning Mill mind mirrors of revenge Mohl moral fable Murder of Gonzago narrative nature Nick Nightingale novel passion person play scene play's players poem poet poetry Polonius Pope Pope's Pyrrhus Rape role salon seems sense Shakespeare Shelley's social society soliloquy soul Spectator stanza Steele Steele's Stephen Guest Stillinger Thalestris things thought tion tragedy tragic truth Tulliver virtue voice women words writing young