The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 11Macmillan Company, 1904 |
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Page ix
... nature . Mr. William Winter has made Shakespeare's coun- try familiar to a host of readers in America and England , and has reproduced the atmosphere in which the poet lived as boy and youth with such sympathetic charm and fidelity that ...
... nature . Mr. William Winter has made Shakespeare's coun- try familiar to a host of readers in America and England , and has reproduced the atmosphere in which the poet lived as boy and youth with such sympathetic charm and fidelity that ...
Page xiv
... nature and significance ; and in the search for this deeper understanding of them- selves the peoples of English blood will turn more and more eagerly to the greatest text - book of their race . In this study of Shakespeare it has been ...
... nature and significance ; and in the search for this deeper understanding of them- selves the peoples of English blood will turn more and more eagerly to the greatest text - book of their race . In this study of Shakespeare it has been ...
Page 1
... nature that the whole world was alive to them in every sight and sound . Personification was not only natural but inevi- table to a race whose imagination was far in advance B I CHAPTER I PAGE THE FORERUNNERS OF SHAKESPEARE I.
... nature that the whole world was alive to them in every sight and sound . Personification was not only natural but inevi- table to a race whose imagination was far in advance B I CHAPTER I PAGE THE FORERUNNERS OF SHAKESPEARE I.
Page 2
... Nature , and , therefore , the sym- bol of the spontaneous and inspirational element in life ; the personification ... natural form , ran the ship into port . Such a being , appealing alike to the imagination and the passions ...
... Nature , and , therefore , the sym- bol of the spontaneous and inspirational element in life ; the personification ... natural form , ran the ship into port . Such a being , appealing alike to the imagination and the passions ...
Page 3
... natural act of worship ; it was also a genuine drama , which unfolded by easy grada- tions into a noble literary form . The frequent repeti- tion of the story threw its dramatic element into more striking relief : the narrative ...
... natural act of worship ; it was also a genuine drama , which unfolded by easy grada- tions into a noble literary form . The frequent repeti- tion of the story threw its dramatic element into more striking relief : the narrative ...
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action actors appeared artistic beauty Ben Jonson brought CALIFORN century character charm chronicle plays church classical comedy contemporaries creative deep drama dramatist earlier England English experience expression fact Falstaff feeling force fortunes freedom friends genius Globe Theatre Hamlet hand harmony Henry human humour imagination influence insight instinct interest Italian John Shakespeare Jonson Julius Cæsar kind King later literary literature lived London Love's Labour's Lost lyrical Macbeth manner Marlowe material mind mood moral nature ness noble passion period play players playwright plot poem poet poet's poetic poetry popular presented probably Puritan Queen Rape of Lucrece romance Romeo and Juliet Shake significance Sonnets speare speare's speech spirit stage story Stratford taste temper theatre thought tion Titus Andronicus touch tradition tragedy tragic Venus and Adonis verse vital Warwickshire writing written young youth