Essays in Romantic LiteratureBooks for Libraries Press, 1968 - 438 pagina's |
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Pagina xvi
... North knew no version save Amyot's , and had he been suddenly enabled to read the original , he would not have recognised it . As Shakespeare , in Troilus and Cressida , turned Homer's heroes into the rufflers of his own time , so North ...
... North knew no version save Amyot's , and had he been suddenly enabled to read the original , he would not have recognised it . As Shakespeare , in Troilus and Cressida , turned Homer's heroes into the rufflers of his own time , so North ...
Pagina 221
... North's unconscious humour ; as when , in the Parable of the Belly and the Members , North writes , ' And so the bellie , all this notwithstanding laughed at their follie ' ; and Shakespeare writes in I. i . , For , look you , I may ...
... North's unconscious humour ; as when , in the Parable of the Belly and the Members , North writes , ' And so the bellie , all this notwithstanding laughed at their follie ' ; and Shakespeare writes in I. i . , For , look you , I may ...
Pagina 224
... North and Shakespeare have each his own excellence , of prose and of verse . Shakespeare has taken over North's vocabulary , and that is much ; but it is more that behind that vocabulary he should have found such an intensity of passion ...
... North and Shakespeare have each his own excellence , of prose and of verse . Shakespeare has taken over North's vocabulary , and that is much ; but it is more that behind that vocabulary he should have found such an intensity of passion ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Adonis adventure allusion Amyot Antony artist Beauty Bellay Cæsar called Cato century Chaucer classic colour Coriolanus Court Cynthia's Revels death Dekker delight doth drama Elizabethan England English Europe eyes Fitton Fleay France French George Wyndham Greece Greek hand hath Henry Herbert heroes honour Jonson Julius Cæsar king Lady language Latin legends literary literature lord Harbert Lucrece Lucullus Lycurgus lyrical Mary Fitton ment mind never night North Ovid Parallel Lives passage passion Pericles play Pléiade Plutarch poem poet Poetaster poetry political Pompey praise prose quoted Renaissance rhyme Romance Rome Ronsard Satiromastix Shake Shakespeare song Song of Roland Sonnets speech Spenser strange sweet thee theme Themistocles theory things thou tion translation Troilus trouvères truth turn unto Venus Venus and Adonis verse Villon words writes written wrote