Shakespeare's Sonnets - the Problems Solved: A Modern Edition with Prose Versions, Introduction and NotesMacmillan, 1973 - 319 頁 Using evidence he recently found in manuscripts at Oxford, Mr. Rowse gives us a new edition which makes clear the whole story of the sonnets. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 35 筆
第 xiii 頁
... play from the hand of Shakespeare , the drama of his own personal life in the decisive years of his career . II The ... plays , particularly Ben Jonson's and Chap- man's , as well as Marlowe's translation of Lucan ; and Thorpe was a ...
... play from the hand of Shakespeare , the drama of his own personal life in the decisive years of his career . II The ... plays , particularly Ben Jonson's and Chap- man's , as well as Marlowe's translation of Lucan ; and Thorpe was a ...
第 xxviii 頁
... play , and describes Berowne with his complete devotion to women , it is Shakespeare describing and laughing at himself . ) The second thing that he tells us is that she is musical : How oft when thou , my music , music play'st Upon ...
... play , and describes Berowne with his complete devotion to women , it is Shakespeare describing and laughing at himself . ) The second thing that he tells us is that she is musical : How oft when thou , my music , music play'st Upon ...
第 178 頁
... play Shakespeare refers specific- ally to Marlowe and quotes his famous line - the only time he quotes a contemporary : Dead shepherd , now I find thy saw of might : ' Who ever loved that loved not at first sight ? ' We learn from the ...
... play Shakespeare refers specific- ally to Marlowe and quotes his famous line - the only time he quotes a contemporary : Dead shepherd , now I find thy saw of might : ' Who ever loved that loved not at first sight ? ' We learn from the ...
常見字詞
absence Adonis appearance bear beauty become better bring close comes Dark dating dead dear death desire difficulty dost doth Elizabethan experience expressed eyes face fact fair false fear feeling follow give given grace hand hate hath heart hold interesting keep kind Lady later leave less lines live look Lord lose lost love's married means mind mistress Muse nature never night older once patron perhaps person phrase play pleasure poem poet poor praise prove reason refers relations relationship seems seen sense Shakespeare sight situation sonnet Southampton speak spirit suggestion summer sweet tells thee theme thine things thou thou art thought true truth turn Venus verse winter woman worth write written young youth