An Essay on the Writings and Genius of Shakespeare Compared with the Greek and French Dramatic PoetsR. Priestley, 1966 - 296 ページ |
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... appear the great catastrophe of the play ! If Shakspeare had not preserved the Ro- man character and sentiments , in his play of the Death of Julius Cæsar , we should have abhorred Brutus as an assassin , who by this artifice appears a ...
... appear the great catastrophe of the play ! If Shakspeare had not preserved the Ro- man character and sentiments , in his play of the Death of Julius Cæsar , we should have abhorred Brutus as an assassin , who by this artifice appears a ...
189 ページ
... appears easy to be done . In the theatrical dialogue , which is an imitation of dis- course , our critics require the language of nature , and a just resemblance of the thing imitated , without the appearance of effort and labour ...
... appears easy to be done . In the theatrical dialogue , which is an imitation of dis- course , our critics require the language of nature , and a just resemblance of the thing imitated , without the appearance of effort and labour ...
200 ページ
... appears treacherous , base , and timid . Maximus , the other conspirator , seems at first a better character ; but in the third act he makes a most lamentable con- fession to a slave , of his love for Emilia , and his jealousy of Cinna ...
... appears treacherous , base , and timid . Maximus , the other conspirator , seems at first a better character ; but in the third act he makes a most lamentable con- fession to a slave , of his love for Emilia , and his jealousy of Cinna ...
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absurd action admired Æschylus affected allegory ambition ancient ANTONY appears Aristotle Atossa Augustus battle of Shrewsbury blank-verse blood Brutus Cassius character CHARON Cinna conspiracy conspirators Corneille critic crown dæmons danger danger death dialogue drama ELPINICE Emilia Euripides Eurystheus excite fable Falstaffe fear French friends genius ghost give glory grace Grecian Greek hath heart heav'n Henry Hercules heroes honour human imagination imitation interest judgment Julius Cæsar kind king lady learned lover Macbeth manners means ment mind moral murder muse nature Nervii never noble passions perfect person piece play PLEBEIAN PLUTARCH poet poetry Prince racters rendered representation ridicule Roman Rome says scene secret sentiments Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's shew sion soliloquy Sophocles soul speak spectator speech spirit stage sublime superstition Tacitus taste tell temper terror thee Theseus thing thou tion tragedians tragedy translation virtue Voltaire vulgar witches words writers