Shakespeare and DecorumMacmillan, 1973 - 227 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 20 筆
第 2 頁
... Elizabethan spectator would have shared our enthusiasm for the superb self - expressive- ness of Othello and of Shakespeare's other heroes ; but in contem- plating the miseries which these men bring upon themselves and others , the ...
... Elizabethan spectator would have shared our enthusiasm for the superb self - expressive- ness of Othello and of Shakespeare's other heroes ; but in contem- plating the miseries which these men bring upon themselves and others , the ...
第 15 頁
... Elizabethan audience would have had no patience with plays written in ac- cordance with the classical separation of social and aesthetic cate- gories . The dramatists , therefore , had to accept that ' my lord fool ' so Chapman called ...
... Elizabethan audience would have had no patience with plays written in ac- cordance with the classical separation of social and aesthetic cate- gories . The dramatists , therefore , had to accept that ' my lord fool ' so Chapman called ...
第 217 頁
... Elizabethan - Jacobean attitude to Boling- broke , see Spedding , Letters and Life of Francis Bacon , V 145 . 9. E. M. W. Tillyard Shakespeare's History Plays ( London , 1944 ) pp . 247 , 248 , 251-2 . For Pater's comments on Richard ...
... Elizabethan - Jacobean attitude to Boling- broke , see Spedding , Letters and Life of Francis Bacon , V 145 . 9. E. M. W. Tillyard Shakespeare's History Plays ( London , 1944 ) pp . 247 , 248 , 251-2 . For Pater's comments on Richard ...
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action answer Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Banquo becomes behaviour Bolingbroke bombast Brabantio Caesar Cassio Castiglione ceremony Cicero Claudius Cleo Cyprus death decorum deed Desdemona disorder doth dramatic Duncan duty effect Elizabethan eloquence Elyot Emilia Enobarbus equivocation Eros fact father fear Fortinbras friends gentle grace gracious grief Hamlet harmony hath heart heaven hint honest honour human husband Iago Iago's II iii italics judgement Julius Caesar kill kind king Lady Macbeth Laertes language lord lovers Macduff Malcolm marriage means mind moral murder nature noble oath Officiis Ophelia Othello passion play Plutarch Polonius Pompey prince proper propriety Puttenham queen question Quintilian rash reason remark Renaissance revenge rhetorical Richard Richard II rites ritual royal scene sense sentence Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian speak speech style tell thee things thou thought Thyreus tion tongue tragedy trans true truth verbal viii violent virtue wife words