Shakespeare the Professional, and Related StudiesElsevier Science & Technology Books, 1973 - 237 pagina's |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-3 van 23
Pagina 191
... Lucrece is not a simple one between death and dishonour , but between death and apparent dishonour on the one hand , and life and secret dishonour on the other . The arguments Lucrece uses to plead with Tarquin are those he had himself ...
... Lucrece is not a simple one between death and dishonour , but between death and apparent dishonour on the one hand , and life and secret dishonour on the other . The arguments Lucrece uses to plead with Tarquin are those he had himself ...
Pagina 199
... Lucrece's breasts should be called ' round turrets ' ; that her white face should look like a flag of surrender ; and that Tarquin should say he comes to scale her ' never - conquer'd fort ' . As Professor Allen points out , 9 the image ...
... Lucrece's breasts should be called ' round turrets ' ; that her white face should look like a flag of surrender ; and that Tarquin should say he comes to scale her ' never - conquer'd fort ' . As Professor Allen points out , 9 the image ...
Pagina 200
... Lucrece in its Christian context . ' Lucrece should have defended herself to the death , or , having been forced , lived free of blame with a guiltless conscience ' . Professor Roy Battenhouse in his Shakespearean Tragedy ( 1969 ) ...
... Lucrece in its Christian context . ' Lucrece should have defended herself to the death , or , having been forced , lived free of blame with a guiltless conscience ' . Professor Roy Battenhouse in his Shakespearean Tragedy ( 1969 ) ...
Inhoudsopgave
PREFACE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 1 Shakespeare the Professional | 1 |
Shakespeares Poets | 2 |
Shaw and Shakespeare | 3 |
Copyright | |
16 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
actor Antony appears argued asks associated audience beauty beginning believe blood body Caesar calls Chapter characters Claudius Cleopatra compares Complaint contrast course critics darkness death deed describes disease doth dramatist earth effect Elizabethan evil example expressed eyes fear feeling Fortune give given Hamlet hand heart heaven Henry idea imagery images imagination interpretation Juliet King Lady Macbeth later light lines living look lovers Lucrece Macbeth meaning merely metaphor mind murder nature never night passages passion performance perhaps play poem poet poetry realize references regarded remarks rhetorical Richard Romeo says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shaw sickness significant sleep Sonnets speaks speech stage stanzas story style suggested tears tells theatre theme things thou thought turn Venus and Adonis verse wishes write written