Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 10Gale Research Company, 1984 - 538 pages |
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Page 15
... gives us the highest experience which it is possible for poetry to give , and it gives it without intermission . Here for once , it seems , Shakespeare had direct command over an essential source of inspiration ; here he surrendered ...
... gives us the highest experience which it is possible for poetry to give , and it gives it without intermission . Here for once , it seems , Shakespeare had direct command over an essential source of inspiration ; here he surrendered ...
Page 253
... give way , Or hedge aside from the direct forthright , Like to an enter'd tide they all rush by And leave you hindmost . [ Troilus and Cressida , III . iii . 145-60 ] The verse of course is much more free , and the underlying speech ...
... give way , Or hedge aside from the direct forthright , Like to an enter'd tide they all rush by And leave you hindmost . [ Troilus and Cressida , III . iii . 145-60 ] The verse of course is much more free , and the underlying speech ...
Page 259
... give self - respect to both poet and patron , to show that the poet is not ignorantly easy to impress , nor the patron to flat- ter - writes about the poorest people ; and with those jazz songs which give an intense effect of luxury and ...
... give self - respect to both poet and patron , to show that the poet is not ignorantly easy to impress , nor the patron to flat- ter - writes about the poorest people ; and with those jazz songs which give an intense effect of luxury and ...
Contents
The Rape of Lucrece | 58 |
Sonnets | 145 |
Venus and Adonis | 405 |
Copyright | |
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Additional Bibliography addressed allegorical argues beauty beloved Brutus character Chester's Collatine conceit couplet crece critic dark lady death dedication doth dramatic Earl edition Elizabethan emotions English essay date excerpt expression eyes fact feeling hath heart human imagery kind language lines literary lover Lover's Complaint Lucrece's marriage meaning ment metaphor metaphysical mind mistress moral narrative nature painting paradox passion Phoenix and Turtle plays poem's poet's poetic poetry praise quatrain Rape of Lucrece reader reason Renaissance rhetorical rival poet seems sense sequence sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's poem Shakespeare's sonnets Sonnet 18 Sonnet 20 Sonnet 36 Sonnet 53 Sonnet 71 Sonnet 94 soul Southampton speare speare's stanza story style suggests sweet symbol Tarquin thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy true truth Venus and Adonis verse William Willie Hughes woman words writing written young youth