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Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Texto
- Título:
-
The english poets : selections with critical introductions / by various writers and a general introduction by Matthew Arnold ; edited by Thomas Humphry Ward - Registro bibliográfico
- Portales:
-
Russell P. Sebold
Visitar sitio web
| Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares
Visitar sitio web
| Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA
Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- New York, The Macmillan Company, 1899
- Materia:
-
Poesía inglesa -- Antologías
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
(from Pericles and Aspasia)
. 481
Cleone to Aspasia
482
The Maid's Lament (from the Examination of Shakespeare
-
Sonnets :
To a Friend...........................................................................7I2
Shakespeare
-
It was
a contiast, startling all and baffling many, to the way in whch,
since Shakespeare and Milton,
-
The too palpable intruders from a spiritual world,
in almost all ghost literature, in Scott and Shakespeare
-
Walter Scott ranks in imaginative power hardly below any
writer save Homer and Shakespeare.
-
Before he came,
all that was known of English literature was the French translation
of Shakespeare, and
-
It it since Byron that we Continentalists
have learned to study Shakespeare and other English writers
-
His poetry was not the poetry of thought and passion, which we
have in Shakespeare ; nor—to use Leigh
-
He is ; he is with
Shakespeare.
• r
*c n
For the second great half of poetic interpretation, for that
-
faculty
of moral interpretation which is in Shakespeare, and is infoimed
by him with the same power
-
Shakespearian
work it is; not imitative, indeed, of Shakespeare, but Shakespearian,
because its expression
-
has that rounded perfection and felicity oi
loveliness of which Shakespeare is the great master, do
-
But they did not limit the powers they controlled: in the
Examination of Shakespeare he is the Englishman
-
[From the Examination of Shakespeare.]
I loved him not; and yet now he is gone
I feel I am alone.
-
Flis songs are very
plainly modelled upon two types, the one that of Shakespeare and
his school, the
-
Meanwhile our Shakespeare wanders past and dreams
His Helena and Hermia. Shall we fight?
-
Shakespeare was of us, Milton was for us,
Burns, Shelley, were with us,—they watch from their graves
-
But none of these were so much to him as the moderns—
Shakespeare and Montaigne in their degree, Wordsworth
-
Shakespeare.
Others abide our question. Thou art free.
-
Shakespeare, William . . i. 435...................................... Prof. E. Dowden.
- Formatos:
-
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Arnold, Matthew, 1822-1888 1 [Eliminar filtro]
- Ward, Thomas Humphry, 1845-1926 1
- Biblioteca de la Universidad de Alicante 1 [Eliminar filtro]
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Texto
- Título:
- The english poets : selections with critical introductions / by various writers and a general introduction by Matthew Arnold ; edited by Thomas Humphry Ward - Registro bibliográfico
- Portales:
- Russell P. Sebold Visitar sitio web | Fondo Antiguo de Universidades y Colecciones Singulares Visitar sitio web | Biblioteca Universitaria. BUA Visitar sitio web
- Pub. orig.:
- New York, The Macmillan Company, 1899
- Materia:
- Poesía inglesa -- Antologías
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- (from Pericles and Aspasia) . 481 Cleone to Aspasia 482 The Maid's Lament (from the Examination of Shakespeare
- Sonnets : To a Friend...........................................................................7I2 Shakespeare
- It was a contiast, startling all and baffling many, to the way in whch, since Shakespeare and Milton,
- The too palpable intruders from a spiritual world, in almost all ghost literature, in Scott and Shakespeare
- Walter Scott ranks in imaginative power hardly below any writer save Homer and Shakespeare.
- Before he came, all that was known of English literature was the French translation of Shakespeare, and
- It it since Byron that we Continentalists have learned to study Shakespeare and other English writers
- His poetry was not the poetry of thought and passion, which we have in Shakespeare ; nor—to use Leigh
- He is ; he is with Shakespeare. • r *c n For the second great half of poetic interpretation, for that
- faculty of moral interpretation which is in Shakespeare, and is infoimed by him with the same power
- Shakespearian work it is; not imitative, indeed, of Shakespeare, but Shakespearian, because its expression
- has that rounded perfection and felicity oi loveliness of which Shakespeare is the great master, do
- But they did not limit the powers they controlled: in the Examination of Shakespeare he is the Englishman
- [From the Examination of Shakespeare.] I loved him not; and yet now he is gone I feel I am alone.
- Flis songs are very plainly modelled upon two types, the one that of Shakespeare and his school, the
- Meanwhile our Shakespeare wanders past and dreams His Helena and Hermia. Shall we fight?
- Shakespeare was of us, Milton was for us, Burns, Shelley, were with us,—they watch from their graves
- But none of these were so much to him as the moderns— Shakespeare and Montaigne in their degree, Wordsworth
- Shakespeare. Others abide our question. Thou art free.
- Shakespeare, William . . i. 435...................................... Prof. E. Dowden.
- Formatos:
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Arnold, Matthew, 1822-1888 1 [Eliminar filtro]
- Ward, Thomas Humphry, 1845-1926 1
- Biblioteca de la Universidad de Alicante 1 [Eliminar filtro]