The Meaning of Shakespeare, Volume 1, Volum 1University of Chicago Press, 15 de febr. 2009 - 408 pàgines In two magnificent and authoritative volumes, Harold C. Goddard takes readers on a tour through the works of William Shakespeare, celebrating his incomparable plays and unsurpassed literary genius. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 52.
Pàgina vii
... Humanity must perforce prey on itself , Like monsters of the deep . Ours is a time that would have sent the Greeks to their oracles . We fail at our peril to consult our own . Nor do I apologize for the length of this book . Maurice ...
... Humanity must perforce prey on itself , Like monsters of the deep . Ours is a time that would have sent the Greeks to their oracles . We fail at our peril to consult our own . Nor do I apologize for the length of this book . Maurice ...
Pàgina x
... human imagination . I have barely scratched the surface of the subject in this volume . Anyone who has gone on reading Shakespeare for years and then writes a book about him is bound to be at a loss if asked just what he owes to the ...
... human imagination . I have barely scratched the surface of the subject in this volume . Anyone who has gone on reading Shakespeare for years and then writes a book about him is bound to be at a loss if asked just what he owes to the ...
Pàgina 3
... human heart or mind . It is rather the spark that leaps across when something within is brought close to some- thing without , or something without to something within . The poetry is the spark . Or , if you will , it is what the spark ...
... human heart or mind . It is rather the spark that leaps across when something within is brought close to some- thing without , or something without to something within . The poetry is the spark . Or , if you will , it is what the spark ...
Pàgina 8
... human imagination , which has scarcely altered in a thousand years , must step aside in deference to " the conventions of the Elizabethan stage " ! The whole thing is reduced to absurdity when we begin to hear , as we do , of ...
... human imagination , which has scarcely altered in a thousand years , must step aside in deference to " the conventions of the Elizabethan stage " ! The whole thing is reduced to absurdity when we begin to hear , as we do , of ...
Pàgina 13
... practically unchanging character of the imagination , the accumulated deposit of all human and animal history . Either , without the other , is vain . So desperate at times appears the condition of our world { 13 } CADWAL AND POLYDORE.
... practically unchanging character of the imagination , the accumulated deposit of all human and animal history . Either , without the other , is vain . So desperate at times appears the condition of our world { 13 } CADWAL AND POLYDORE.
Continguts
1 | |
15 | |
25 | |
28 | |
V Titus Andronicus | 33 |
VI Richard III | 35 |
VII The Two Gentlemen of Verona | 41 |
VIII Loves Labours Lost | 48 |
XIV King John | 140 |
XV Richard II | 148 |
XVI Henry IV Part 1 Henry IV Part II The Merry Wives of Windsor | 161 |
XVII Henry V | 215 |
XVIII Henry VIII | 269 |
XIX Much Ado about Nothing | 271 |
XX As You Like It | 281 |
XXI Twelfth Night | 294 |
IX The PoetPlaywright | 55 |
X The Taming of the Shrew | 68 |
XI A MidsummerNights Dream | 74 |
XII The Merchant of Venice | 81 |
XIII Romeo and Juliet | 117 |
XXII Julius Caesar | 307 |
XXIII Hamlet | 331 |
Index | 387 |
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
Antonio Bassanio battle beginning blood Brutus called Capulet casket Cassius character Comedy Comedy of Errors comes cries critics crown dead death devil disguise doth dramatic Duke eyes fact Falstaff father fear fool genius Gentlemen of Verona Ghost give Hamlet hath heart heaven Henry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's hero honor Hotspur imagination Julius Caesar Justice kill King Lear King's Laertes lines lord lover Merchant of Venice Mercutio mercy metaphor Midsummer-Night's Dream mind moral mother murder nature never night peace play poet poetry Polonius Portia Prince revenge Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet Rosalind says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shylock soul speak speech spirit story sweet symbol tell theater theatrical thee theme things thou thought throne Touchstone tragedy true truth turns Twelfth Night Tybalt unconscious utter words youth