The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 11Macmillan Company, 1904 |
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Page 64
... regarded at that time as a very serious offence against good morals , although not without grave provocation to land- owners . Young men at the universities were not unfrequently detected in the same forbidden but fasci- nating sport ...
... regarded at that time as a very serious offence against good morals , although not without grave provocation to land- owners . Young men at the universities were not unfrequently detected in the same forbidden but fasci- nating sport ...
Page 108
... regarded as dishonour- able . Reputable playwrights , having sold a work to a theatre , did not regard it as available for publi- cation . It is easy to understand , therefore , the uncertainty about the text of many of the Elizabethan ...
... regarded as dishonour- able . Reputable playwrights , having sold a work to a theatre , did not regard it as available for publi- cation . It is easy to understand , therefore , the uncertainty about the text of many of the Elizabethan ...
Page 110
... regarded not as literature but as the capital of the company , to be recast , rewritten , re- vised , and made over to fit the times and suit the audience , which was sometimes to be found at the Palace , sometimes in the Inns of Court ...
... regarded not as literature but as the capital of the company , to be recast , rewritten , re- vised , and made over to fit the times and suit the audience , which was sometimes to be found at the Palace , sometimes in the Inns of Court ...
Page 113
... regarded as his work by some of his contem- poraries , and included in the first complete edition of the plays in 1623 ; but sixty years after his death , Edward Ravenscroft , who edited the play in 1678 , said : " I have been told by ...
... regarded as his work by some of his contem- poraries , and included in the first complete edition of the plays in 1623 ; but sixty years after his death , Edward Ravenscroft , who edited the play in 1678 , said : " I have been told by ...
Page 117
... regarded as one of the prime forces in the de- velopment of that intense and deeply practical patri- otism which knits the widely scattered parts of the modern empire into a vital racial unity . It was to this rich mass of material that ...
... regarded as one of the prime forces in the de- velopment of that intense and deeply practical patri- otism which knits the widely scattered parts of the modern empire into a vital racial unity . It was to this rich mass of material that ...
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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