The Works of Shakespeare, Volume 10Macmillan Company, 1906 - 399 pagine |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 12
Pagina 4
... Plutarch's Life of Coriolanus , as translated by North ( 1579 ) . Thus Plutarch was here dealing with a story as legendary as those of Hamlet or Macbeth , but steeped in senti- ment quite foreign to Holinshed or Saxo . A blurred picture ...
... Plutarch's Life of Coriolanus , as translated by North ( 1579 ) . Thus Plutarch was here dealing with a story as legendary as those of Hamlet or Macbeth , but steeped in senti- ment quite foreign to Holinshed or Saxo . A blurred picture ...
Pagina 5
... Plutarch dwells so vindictively upon the machinations of his enemies , the tribunes , to bring it about , that the sympathy of his readers is all given to the banished man . Moreover , when allied with the enemies of Rome Coriolanus ...
... Plutarch dwells so vindictively upon the machinations of his enemies , the tribunes , to bring it about , that the sympathy of his readers is all given to the banished man . Moreover , when allied with the enemies of Rome Coriolanus ...
Pagina 6
... Plutarch , in his scrupulous regard for con- flicting traditions , overlays the germs of tragedy which the legend clearly possessed . No such scruples impeded the art of Shakespeare . His Rome is still farther than Plutarch's from the ...
... Plutarch , in his scrupulous regard for con- flicting traditions , overlays the germs of tragedy which the legend clearly possessed . No such scruples impeded the art of Shakespeare . His Rome is still farther than Plutarch's from the ...
Pagina 7
... Plutarch the reaction which deprived Coriolanus of the consulship is due to the cautious after - thoughts of the plebeian electors who had approved it : in Shakespeare it is the work of the sleepless jealousy of the tribunes . Such ...
... Plutarch the reaction which deprived Coriolanus of the consulship is due to the cautious after - thoughts of the plebeian electors who had approved it : in Shakespeare it is the work of the sleepless jealousy of the tribunes . Such ...
Pagina 8
... Plutarch , is for Shakespeare also the raison d'être of the whole story ; and he makes it plausible by a profusion of subtle psychological strokes . It is Volumnia who prevails upon her son , as candidate for the consulship ( iii . 2 ...
... Plutarch , is for Shakespeare also the raison d'être of the whole story ; and he makes it plausible by a profusion of subtle psychological strokes . It is Volumnia who prevails upon her son , as candidate for the consulship ( iii . 2 ...
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Parole e frasi comuni
Adonis Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Athens Aufidius bear beauty blood breast breath cheeks Collatine Cominius Coriolanus Corioli dead dear death dost thou doth ears Enter Exeunt Exit eyes face fair false fear flatter Flav fool foul friends give gods grief hate hath hear heart heaven honour kiss Lart LARTIUS lips live look Lord Timon love's LOVER'S COMPLAINT Lucrece Lucullus Marcius Menenius misanthropy ne'er never night noble pity Plutarch Poet poor praise pray proud quoth Richard Barnfield Roman Rome SCENE Senators Shakespeare shalt shame SICINIUS Sonnets sorrow speak sweet Tarquin tears tell thee thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thou wilt thought thyself TIMON OF ATHENS tongue tribunes true unto Venus and Adonis VIRGILIA voices Volsces Volscian VOLUMNIA weep words worthy wounds youth ΤΟ