The Works of Shakespeare ..., Volume 39Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1922 |
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Page v
... Greek romances has received , since the Introduction was written , no little support from the recently published work of Dr. S. L. Wolff , entitled The Greek Romances in Elizabethan Prose Fiction.1 But whereas I was not able to do more ...
... Greek romances has received , since the Introduction was written , no little support from the recently published work of Dr. S. L. Wolff , entitled The Greek Romances in Elizabethan Prose Fiction.1 But whereas I was not able to do more ...
Page xix
... Greek oracle ? The intervention of the oracular message in the romances . ] affairs of men is , of course , a classical motive . It occupies an important place in Greek epic and drama , and from the first beginnings of Greek romance ...
... Greek oracle ? The intervention of the oracular message in the romances . ] affairs of men is , of course , a classical motive . It occupies an important place in Greek epic and drama , and from the first beginnings of Greek romance ...
Page xx
... Greek romance to the close of the twelfth century . The oracle introduced into the works of these writers is usually that of the Pythian Apollo at Delphi , but in the Ephesiaca of Xenophon it is that of the Egyptian god Apis . The ...
... Greek romance to the close of the twelfth century . The oracle introduced into the works of these writers is usually that of the Pythian Apollo at Delphi , but in the Ephesiaca of Xenophon it is that of the Egyptian god Apis . The ...
Page xxi
... Greek romance . The pastoral element in his work , which is handled with such infinite charm by Shake- speare , offers some striking points of resemblance to the famous Daphnis and Chloe of Longus . The discovery of Fawnia by the ...
... Greek romance . The pastoral element in his work , which is handled with such infinite charm by Shake- speare , offers some striking points of resemblance to the famous Daphnis and Chloe of Longus . The discovery of Fawnia by the ...
Page xxii
William Shakespeare. The Greek atmosphere of The Winter's Tale . ] of chivalric romance and brings them near to the earlier Greek models . In his employment of the motives of Greek romance Greene had undoubtedly direct recourse to those ...
William Shakespeare. The Greek atmosphere of The Winter's Tale . ] of chivalric romance and brings them near to the earlier Greek models . In his employment of the motives of Greek romance Greene had undoubtedly direct recourse to those ...
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Common terms and phrases
Anon Antigonus Apollo Autolycus ballad bear Bellaria beseech Bohemia Camb Camillo Capell Cassander child Cleomenes Clown Collier conj court Cymbeline dance daughter death Delphos Dict Dion discase Dorastus Dyce Egistus Elizabethan emendations Exeunt Exit eyes F. W. MOORMAN father Fawnia fear Florizel Folios follows Furness Gent gentleman give Grace Greek Greene's Pandosto hand Hanmer hast hath heart heavens Hermione honest honour jealousy Johnson Keightley king King Lear king of Bohemia lady Leon Leontes look lord Malone Mamillius meaning Measure for Measure mistress Mopsa o'er oracle Pandosto pare passage Paul Paulina Perdita phrase play Polixenes Pope pray prince prithee queen romance Rowe SCENE seems sense Shakespeare Shep shepherd Sicilia sorrow speak story swear thee Theobald thing Thirsis thou art thought true Warburton wife Winter's Tale word ΙΟ