Family Relationships in Shakespeare and the Restoration Comedy of MannersOxford, 1983 - 233 ページ |
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... wholly different from the ' small , immobile , close - knit , face - to - face , status - bound community , '64 that they had known . Here they felt free to indulge in many of the forbidden pleasures . This new urban culture naturally ...
... wholly different from the ' small , immobile , close - knit , face - to - face , status - bound community , '64 that they had known . Here they felt free to indulge in many of the forbidden pleasures . This new urban culture naturally ...
55 ページ
... wholly submissive daughter , but by introducing Beatrice Shakespeare deliberately undercuts her docile attitude ... wholly dispose myself . ' ' For to your wisdom I wholly dispose myself ' is not a position that Shakes- peare demands ...
... wholly submissive daughter , but by introducing Beatrice Shakespeare deliberately undercuts her docile attitude ... wholly dispose myself . ' ' For to your wisdom I wholly dispose myself ' is not a position that Shakes- peare demands ...
56 ページ
... wholly correct . But this need not mean that this ' sexuality ' frees young men and women wholly from ' the ties of family'.41 That is often only a temporary phase . Moreover , it is applicable to all young people in love , irrespective ...
... wholly correct . But this need not mean that this ' sexuality ' frees young men and women wholly from ' the ties of family'.41 That is often only a temporary phase . Moreover , it is applicable to all young people in love , irrespective ...
目次
The Changing Pattern of the Family | 1 |
Parents and Children | 33 |
Crabbed Age and Youth | 76 |
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多く使われている語句
accept arranged marriage asks attitude Beatrice become Bellair Capulet character Cited claim clearly Cockwood Comedy of Manners comic heroine Congreve consent contemporary Coriolanus Country Wife course daughter Desdemona Dorimant Dorimant's duty Elizabethan Emelia England Fainall Falstaff father Germaine Greer give happy Harriet hath hero honour human husband Ibid II.i II.ii III.i III.iii Italics IV.i John Locke Juliet kind King Lear L. C. Knights Lady Wishfort liberty live London lord lovers marry Mary Astell Matrimony Millamant mind Mirabel mistress moral mother nature never obedience old age Old Bellair Orlando Othello parents patriarchal family peare's perhaps period Petruchio play playwrights Puritan recognize regard rejects relationship Restoration comedy Restoration comic Restoration Drama riage role Romeo Rosalind says scene seventeenth century sexual Shakespeare situation social society surely tells thee thing Thomas thou tion treated V.ii wholly wife wives woman women Young Bellair youth