Lectures Upon ShakspeareClassic Books Company, 2001 |
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Pagina 20
... Hence is produced a more vivid reflection of the truths of nature and of the human heart , united with a constant activity modifying and correcting these truths by that sort of pleasurable emotion , which the exertion of all our ...
... Hence is produced a more vivid reflection of the truths of nature and of the human heart , united with a constant activity modifying and correcting these truths by that sort of pleasurable emotion , which the exertion of all our ...
Pagina 25
... Hence we may admit the appropriateness to the old comedy , as a work of defined art , of allusions and descriptions , which morality can never justify , and , only with reference to the author himself , and only as being the effect or ...
... Hence we may admit the appropriateness to the old comedy , as a work of defined art , of allusions and descriptions , which morality can never justify , and , only with reference to the author himself , and only as being the effect or ...
Pagina 28
... hence we should form a better notion of the choral music from the solemn hymns and psalms of austere church music than from any species of theatrical singing . A single flute or pipe was the ordinary ac- companiment ; and it is not to ...
... hence we should form a better notion of the choral music from the solemn hymns and psalms of austere church music than from any species of theatrical singing . A single flute or pipe was the ordinary ac- companiment ; and it is not to ...
Pagina 29
... hence their passions , their obscure hopes and fears , their wandering through the unknown , their grander moral feelings , their more august conception of man as man , their future rather than their past - in a word , their sub- limity ...
... hence their passions , their obscure hopes and fears , their wandering through the unknown , their grander moral feelings , their more august conception of man as man , their future rather than their past - in a word , their sub- limity ...
Pagina 34
... hence we see that the Mysteries were succeeded by Moralities , or dialogues and plots of allegorical personages . Again , some character in real history had become so famous , so proverbial , as Nero for instance , that they were ...
... hence we see that the Mysteries were succeeded by Moralities , or dialogues and plots of allegorical personages . Again , some character in real history had become so famous , so proverbial , as Nero for instance , that they were ...
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
admirable appear Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Ben Jonson cause character Coleridge comedy common divine Don Quixote drama effect especially excellent excite express exquisite fancy feeling genius give Greek Hamlet hath Hence human humor Iago idea images imagination imitation individual instance intellect interest Jonson judgment Julius Cæsar king language latter Lear Lecture Love's Labor's Lost Macbeth means metre Milton mind moral nature never object observe original Othello pantheism Paradise Lost passage passion perhaps persons philosophic Plato play pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Polonius present principle produced reader reason religion Richard III Roman Romeo Romeo and Juliet S. T. COLERIDGE scene Schlegel sense Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare's Shaksperian soul speech spirit style supposed taste thing thou thought tion tragedy true truth understanding unity verse Warburton whilst whole words writers
Populaire passages
Pagina 22 - ... reveals itself in the balance or reconciliation of opposite or discordant qualities: of sameness, with difference; of the general, with the concrete; the idea, with the image; the individual, with the representative; the sense of novelty and freshness, with old and familiar objects; a more than usual state of emotion, with more than usual order...
Pagina 41 - But the images of men's wits and knowledges remain in books, exempted from the wrong of time, and capable of perpetual renovation. Neither are they fitly to be called images, because they generate still, and cast their seeds in the minds of others, provoking and causing infinite actions and opinions in succeeding ages...