Shakespeare's SoliloquiesRoutledge, 15 d’abr. 2013 - 224 pàgines First published in 1987. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 31.
Pàgina 9
... particular impact of a soliloquy can never be explained by a single ingredient, but only by the simultaneous effect of several. The following chapters attempt to show the great variety of devices used by Shakespeare in this respect. A ...
... particular impact of a soliloquy can never be explained by a single ingredient, but only by the simultaneous effect of several. The following chapters attempt to show the great variety of devices used by Shakespeare in this respect. A ...
Pàgina 10
... particular significance, because Shakespeare — unlike most of his contemporaries — tends most Often to introduce his soliloquies in the middle of scenes; soliloquies at the beginning and end of a scene, though they do occur, are less ...
... particular significance, because Shakespeare — unlike most of his contemporaries — tends most Often to introduce his soliloquies in the middle of scenes; soliloquies at the beginning and end of a scene, though they do occur, are less ...
Pàgina 22
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Pàgina 26
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Pàgina 29
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Heu assolit el vostre límit de visualització per a aquest llibre.
Continguts
1 | |
13 | |
3 SOLILOQUIES FROM THE COMEDIES AND ROMANCES | 45 |
4 SOLILOQUIES FROM THE TRAGEDIES | 88 |
5 CONCLUSION | 179 |
NOTES | 193 |
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY | 210 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Shakespeare's Soliloquies: The Presidential Address of the Modern Humanities ... Wolfgang Clemen Visualització de fragments - 1964 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
abstract action actor already Angelo apostrophe appearance audience audience’s awareness becomes beginning Brutus Caesar character Clemen comedy comic contrast conventions convey Cymbeline dagger death deed Desdemona dialogue difficult dramatic dramatists effect Elizabethan emotions epithalamium expression eyes Falstaff father feeling figure final finally find first act first soliloquy follow Gentlemen of Verona gestures give Hamlet hath Helena Henry IV honour Iachimo imagery imagination Imogen’s impression influence Isabella Juliet julius Caesar King Lear Lady Macbeth language Launce Lear’s lines London loquy Lucius magic Malvolio mind monologue murder nature night Othello particular passage personification powers preceding presented Prospero questions reflection rhetorical Richard Richard III Romeo Romeo and juliet scene sense sentence sequence Shakespeare Survey Shakespeare’s plays Shakespeare’s soliloquies significance situation sleep soli speak speaker specific speech spoken stage style thee There’s thou thoughts tragedies tragic Twelfth Night Tybalt vision words