The Pelican Guide to English Literature: The age of Shakespeare. [1964,c1955]- 3. From Donne to Marvell. [1962,c1956]- 4. From Dryden to Johnson. [1965Penguin Books, 1962 |
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Halaman 163
... seems possible that Marlowe may have been more de- tached than has been admitted on either side . The two parts of the play must have been written in rapid suc- cession , but the Prologue to Part II indicates that it was composed be ...
... seems possible that Marlowe may have been more de- tached than has been admitted on either side . The two parts of the play must have been written in rapid suc- cession , but the Prologue to Part II indicates that it was composed be ...
Halaman 207
... seems wiser to stop short of in- voking such an abstraction as ' Caesarism ' ; Shakespeare shows con- spicuous discretion in not raising in our minds the question of what Caesar's rule would really have been like . What matters for the ...
... seems wiser to stop short of in- voking such an abstraction as ' Caesarism ' ; Shakespeare shows con- spicuous discretion in not raising in our minds the question of what Caesar's rule would really have been like . What matters for the ...
Halaman 383
... seems to allow when he admits that Bacon had an Elizabethan ' eye for the literary possibilities of the spoken idiom ' , and ften made use of ' pithy comparisons and muscular idioms ' typical of Elizabethan English . But we must not ...
... seems to allow when he admits that Bacon had an Elizabethan ' eye for the literary possibilities of the spoken idiom ' , and ften made use of ' pithy comparisons and muscular idioms ' typical of Elizabethan English . But we must not ...
Istilah dan frasa umum
action actors Antony audience Bacon Beaumont Bussy Cambridge century Chapman characters civility classical Cleopatra comedy comic conception contrast conventions Coriolanus court courtiers courtly criticism death drama dramatists E. K. Chambers Elizabethan emotion England English Essays example expression F. R. Leavis Faustus feeling Fletcher Hamlet hath Henry hero honour human humour imagery images imagination Jacobean Jonson King Lear L. C. Knights language literary literature London M. C. Bradbrook Macbeth Marlowe Marlowe's Marston means Middleton modern moral Nashe's nature night Othello passion Pericles philosophical phrase play plot poem poet poetic poetry political popular prose Puritans Ralegh Renaissance revenge Revenger's Tragedy rhetoric rhythm romantic satire scene sense Shakespeare Sidney social sonnet speech Spenser stage style symbolic T. S. Eliot Tamburlaine theatre thee theme things thou tion tradition tragedy tragic Troilus Troilus and Cressida Twelfth Night verse Volpone whole words writing