Shakespeare-characters; Chiefly Those SubordinateSmith, Elder & Company, 1863 - 521 pagina's |
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Pagina 477
... Coriolanus . It is a complete abstraction of the aristocracy of war ; and terribly grand is that bloody pæan . We lose the idea of a woman in the speech , and are absorbed in that pagan personation of contest and carnage . From the ...
... Coriolanus . It is a complete abstraction of the aristocracy of war ; and terribly grand is that bloody pæan . We lose the idea of a woman in the speech , and are absorbed in that pagan personation of contest and carnage . From the ...
Pagina 478
... Coriolanus , " " Julius Cæsar , " and " Antony and Cleopatra , " -we discern in his treatment of his subjects a wonderful harmony of manner and language , according with the several eras in which the scenes are laid . In the early ...
... Coriolanus , " " Julius Cæsar , " and " Antony and Cleopatra , " -we discern in his treatment of his subjects a wonderful harmony of manner and language , according with the several eras in which the scenes are laid . In the early ...
Pagina 479
... Coriolanus . " His celebrated apostrophe to his native city , upon entering the Forum , is a beautiful specimen of the language of the whole drama : - " The honour'd gods Keep Rome in safety , and the chairs of justice Supplied with ...
... Coriolanus . " His celebrated apostrophe to his native city , upon entering the Forum , is a beautiful specimen of the language of the whole drama : - " The honour'd gods Keep Rome in safety , and the chairs of justice Supplied with ...
Pagina 480
... Coriolanus at the approaching war with the Volscians , when he says- " I am glad on't ; then we shall have means to vent Our musty superfluity ; " a speech admirably in character with one who considered the masses below him in the ...
... Coriolanus at the approaching war with the Volscians , when he says- " I am glad on't ; then we shall have means to vent Our musty superfluity ; " a speech admirably in character with one who considered the masses below him in the ...
Pagina 481
... Coriolanus is under his own roof , a poor and banished man ; finding his great rival thus within his power , it allays his thirst of competition , and substitutes in its place a complacent feeling of patronage , which takes the ...
... Coriolanus is under his own roof , a poor and banished man ; finding his great rival thus within his power , it allays his thirst of competition , and substitutes in its place a complacent feeling of patronage , which takes the ...
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3d Serv action admirable ambition answer Antony Antony and Cleopatra Banquo bear Beatrice beauty Benedick British Poets brother Cæsar Caliban Cassio Celia character CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE Clown conduct Coriolanus cousin death Desdemona doth drama Duke Enobarbus eyes faith Falconbridge Falstaff father feeling fellow fool gentle Gilfillan give Hamlet happy hath hear heart Heaven honest honour human humour husband Iago instinct John Julius Cæsar king Lady Lear Leonato look lord Macbeth Malvolio master Master Doctor merry mind mistress moral murder nature never night noble Octavius Othello passion perfect person philosophy play plot poet poet's poetical Polonius Pompey prince qualities queen remarkable replies Richard Richard III Rosalind says scene sense Shakespeare Shylock soldier soul speak specimen speech spirit sweet thee thing thou art thought tion true turn Twelfth Night uttered virtue whole wife woman womanly women words worthy young