ShakspereMacmillan, 1893 - 167 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 14
Page 6
... lives of saints , or threw into the form of a play some moral allegory , enlivened by grotesque incidents . Out of this rude early drama had grown , by the time that Shakspere began to write , three or four divergent branches . ( a ) ...
... lives of saints , or threw into the form of a play some moral allegory , enlivened by grotesque incidents . Out of this rude early drama had grown , by the time that Shakspere began to write , three or four divergent branches . ( a ) ...
Page 14
... live , in spite of the plague which desolated Stratford during the year of his birth , and was to write the plays and poems that we know . Other children followed : a daughter , who survived William Shakspere , and is remembered in his ...
... live , in spite of the plague which desolated Stratford during the year of his birth , and was to write the plays and poems that we know . Other children followed : a daughter , who survived William Shakspere , and is remembered in his ...
Page 19
... lives should come really together again , and that it should be indeed good for each to accept things as they were . 12. Deer - Stealing . Leaves Stratford . The immediate cause of Shakspere's departure from Stratford is thus told ...
... lives should come really together again , and that it should be indeed good for each to accept things as they were . 12. Deer - Stealing . Leaves Stratford . The immediate cause of Shakspere's departure from Stratford is thus told ...
Page 24
... live there as a gentleman . 1596 John Shakspere applied for a grant of coat- armour ; the grant , though drafted , having been delayed , it was again sought in 1599. But if Shakspere hoped to found a family that hope received a blow ...
... live there as a gentleman . 1596 John Shakspere applied for a grant of coat- armour ; the grant , though drafted , having been delayed , it was again sought in 1599. But if Shakspere hoped to found a family that hope received a blow ...
Page 54
... lives of Brutus and Hamlet . They had not wronged their own souls by crime . But now passion and crime form the sub- jects of tragedy , instead of error or the cruelty of fate . The bonds of life are broken : in Othello , the bonds ...
... lives of Brutus and Hamlet . They had not wronged their own souls by crime . But now passion and crime form the sub- jects of tragedy , instead of error or the cruelty of fate . The bonds of life are broken : in Othello , the bonds ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actors Antony appeared beauty blank verse Brutus character Cleopatra Comedy of Errors critics Cymbeline death dramatic dramatist Duke earlier early English evidence evil Falstaff feeling Fletcher's Folio genius Gentlemen of Verona Globe Hamlet Henry VI Henry VIII heroic historical plays human humorous husband imagination Imogen incident John Julius Cæsar King later Lear light endings London Love's Labour's Lost lovers Lucrece Macbeth Marlowe Merry Wives Midsummer Night's Dream mirth moral nature Night noble old play Othello passages passion perhaps Pericles period persons play of Shakspere players poem poet poetry Portia portion probably published Queen Richard Richard II romantic Romeo and Juliet scene Shak Shakespeare Shakspere's name Shakspere's play Shaksperian Shrew Sonnets sorrow spere spirit story Stratford Tempest theatre Timon Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida true Venus and Adonis weak endings wife Winter's Tale writings written young youth