Resultados de búsqueda (7)
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1
Texto
- Título:
-
The romantic movement in French literature : traced by a series of texts / selected and edited by H.F. Stewart and Arthur Tilley, M. A. - 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.:
- Cambridge : The University Press, 1917
- Materias:
-
Romanticismo -- Francia | Literatura francesa -- Siglo 19º -- Historia y crítica
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
Caroline (who afterwards
married Schelling the philosopher), Germans are almost justified in claiming
Shakespeare
-
Stendhal, Racine
et Shakespeare, p. 2.
12
MADAME DE STAËL: DE L’ALLEMAGNE
Un des grands avantages
-
Shakespeare est autant
admiré par le peuple en Angleterre que par la classe
supérieure.
-
Shakespeare, qu’on veut appeler un barbare , a peutêtre un esprit trop philosophique, une pénétration
-
A force
d’esprit, Shakespeare refroidit souvent 1.action, et es
Français s’entendent beaucoup mieux à
-
dira-t-on, peut-on
reprocher à Shakespeare trop de finesse dans les aperçus,
lui qui se permit des situations
-
Shakespeare
réunit souvent des qualités et même des défauts con
traires ; il est quelquefois en deçà
-
En Angleterre,
toutes les classes sont également attirées par les pièces
de Shakespeare.
-
Stendhal, Racine et Shakespeare,
p. 18.
-
He admired
Delille, and thought Corneille and Racine superior to
Shakespeare and Schiller.
-
Jean-François Ducis (1733-1816) introduced Shakespeare to the French
stage, though in an extremely Gallicized
-
Ainsi Vhorloge
qui, au grand amusement de Voltaire3, désigne au Brutus
de Shakespeare l’heure où il doit
-
Que vous
soyez l’écho de Racine ou le reflet de Shakespeare, vous
n’êtes toujours qu’un écho et qu’un
-
Meanwhile with no less vigour and fecundity Alex
andre Dumas, fired by the contact with Shakespeare,
-
Les deux génies rivaux
unissent leur double flamme, et de cette flamme jaillit
Shakespeare.
-
Shakespeare, c’est le drame ; et le
drame, qui fond sous un même souffle le grotesque et
le sublime,
-
Beaumarchais était
morose, Molière était sombre, Shakespeare mélancolique.
-
Racine et Shakespeare, p. 40.
-
D’ailleurs, Voltaire, qui ne veut pas de
Shakespeare, ne veut pas des Grecs non plus.
-
La
tragédie n’est pas pour cette école ce quelle est pour le
bonhomme Gilles1 Shakespeare, par exemple
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:2
Texto
- Título:
-
Facing forward. Poems of courage / collected by Joseph Morris and St. Clair Adams - 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, George Sully & company, cop. 1925
- Materias:
-
Poesía inglesa | Poesía americana
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (11
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
William Shakespeare.. . 153
Contentment ..........................
-
William Shakespeare...
Mother 0’ Mine..................... Rudyard Kipling............
-
William Shakespeare
Stick to It............................... Edgar A. Guest..............'
-
William Shakespeare
William Shakespeare
Darrell Figgis..........
Wanted..............
-
William Shakespeare,
21
BARB-WIRE BILL
There is nothing more inspiring in human nature than the
willingness
-
W
William Shakespeare.
4i
THE MAN WHO BRINGS UP THE REAR END
It is not always the conspicuous who
-
William Shakespeare.
96
O
IFE’S a Battle, full of stress,
Full of Change,
Struggle, Combat, Weariness
-
M
William Shakespeare.
153
IN A FRIENDLY SORT O’ WAY
THE DREAMS AHEAD
Luther Burbank is known the
-
William Shakespeare.
183
And the birds, in shadows dim,
Sang their sweetest over him.
-
Shakespeare played one of the roles in
his comedy “Every Man in His Humour” 1598.
-
Shakespeare, William.
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:3
Texto
- Título:
-
Nineteenth century letters / selected and edited, with an introduction, by Byron Johnson Rees - 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 ; Chicago ; Boston, C. Scribners Sons, cop. 1919
- Materias:
-
Escritores ingleses -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia | Escritores norteamericanos -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
He
is the Robert Blake,f whose wild designs accompany a
* Shakespeare. Dr.
-
We next passed a
night and part of the next day at Stratford-on-Avon,
visiting the house where Shakespeare
-
Shakespeare may or may not
Hit. 42]
BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON
149
have been born in the room shown;
-
he made his purchase; and as people, except on singu
lar emergencies, are generally born upstairs, Shakespeare
-
, while the sheep dotted about
on the glittering green where the sun streaked in, an
nounced where Shakespeare
-
They spoke‘to me as if Shakespeare was whispering in
my ear.
-
The housekeeper, a pleasant woman, said, “Here
is the hall where Sir Thomas tried Shakespeare.”
-
“Well,” said I, “did you ever
hear of Shakespeare ?” “Heer of un, ah!” (puff!
-
In
the passage I found a head of Shakespeare, which I had
not before seen.
-
I’ll tell you what—on the 23rd was Shakespeare bom.
-
Shakespeare that may have come rather new
to you, which must be continually happening, notwith
standing
-
He seems im
patient that even Shakespeare should be admired: “so
much out of my own pocket!”
-
Fanny Kemble is reading Shakespeare.
-
Donne
[SHAKESPEARE; LIFE OF COLERIDGE]
[London, 17 Gloucester Street, Queen Square]
1834.
-
It is Shakespeare.
Woodbridge, April 16, 1878.
-
The other
night some men were talking of Dickens and Bulwer as
if they were equal to Shakespeare, and
-
Little did John Chinaman dream what he was making,
as little as John Shakespeare knew that he had begotten
-
Homer, Plato, Dante, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Goethe—
are they not everlasting boundary-stones that mark
-
Men to whom I bow my
head (Shakespeare, Goethe; and in their way, Molière,
Cervantes) are Realists au
-
The prose in
Shakespeare and in Congreve is perfect.
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:4
Texto
- Título:
-
Eighteenth-century plays - 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.:
- London : J. M. Dent and Sons ; New york : E. P. Dutton, 1928
- Materia:
-
Teatro inglés -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (18
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
Shakespeare was accepted in strange perversions.
-
e has a perm anent place in the history
of English literature as the first editor and biographer of
Shakespeare
-
and
F letcher and other Elizabethans continued to hold the
stage, though often in adaptations, and Shakespeare
-
T h at it
was “ w ritten in im itation of Shakespeare s style is not
apparent; b u t th e w riter has
-
notable features of G arrick’s
m anagem ent of D rury Lane (1747-76) were his reviváis of
comedies b y Shakespeare
-
When Learning’s triumph o’er her barb’rous foes
First rear’d the stage, immortal Shakespeare rose;
Each
-
a posthumous
pubhcation was much esteemed; and he was the first systematic
editor and biographer of Shakespeare
-
In suoh an age, immortal Shakespeare wrote,
By no quaint rules, ñor hampering crities taught;
With rough
-
present what hath caused such feuds in the
learned world, whether this piece was originally written by
Shakespeare
-
iu this place to commend the great care
ot our author to preserve the metre of blank verse, in which Shakespeare
-
Shakespeare, who has given such
amazing proofs of his genius, in that as well as in comedy, in
his Hamlet
-
Besides writing many successful plays, some of them brilliant,
he adapted plays of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson
-
that Shakespeare was no fool!
Col. T. I’m gíad you like him, sir!— So ends the pool!
-
— I seldom blush.—
For little Shakespeare, faith! I’d take a push!
Lord Min. News, news!
-
It is Shakespeare, with his
“ daffodils
That come before the swallow dares, and take
The winds of March
-
287
Coleridge’s Biographia, 1 1
,,
Shirley, 288
,, Golden Book, 43
,,
Villette, 351
,, Lectures on Shakespeare
-
Kingston’s Peter the Whaler, 6
„
Three Midshipmen, 7
Kirby’s Kalevala, 259-60
Koran, 380
Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare
-
Plays, 95
Sismondi’s Italian Republics, 250 Thackeray’s Esmond, 73
„ Vanity Fair, 298
Smeaton’s Life of Shakespeare
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:5
Texto
- Título:
-
Choix des lettres du XVIIIe siècle / publiées avec une introduction, des notices et des notes par Gustave Lanson - 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.:
- Paris, Librairie Hachette et Cie., 1906
- Materia:
-
Literatura francesa -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (20
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
. — VOLTAIRE ET SHAKESPEARE.
A Monsieur l’abbé Desfontaines 3.
A Cirey, le 14 novembre 4735.
-
, monsieur, ce n’est
Pas a vous d empêcher les hommes de lire, vous y perdriez
trop, etc.
’JP
36. — SHAKESPEARE
-
C’était Diderot qui
lui en avait donné le conseil.
175
4L — CONTRE UN TRADUCTEUR DE SHAKESPEARE.
-
Cette dame était venue à I in-8, sa traduction de Shakespeare,
erney en 1766 : elle était idolâtre I
-
Je vous
embrasse de tout mon cœur.
4. — VOLTAIRE TRADUCTEUR DE SHAKESPEARE.
AU MÊME.
-
Quelque absurde que me
paraisse la pièce de Shakespeare, quelque grossiers que
soient réellement les
-
Il a ainsi "u'e“t
Shakespeare, et les prédicateurs I traits de poète, des images lyiW
253
veille; je
-
Elle a mal jugé
Corneille et méconnu Shakespeare : elle a senti le sublime de
Corneille et la puissance
-
de Shakespeare.
-
car depuis feu Protée, personne n’a été si
dissemblable d’un jour à l’autre que vous l'êtes.
10. — SHAKESPEARE
-
Shakespeare était son
idole.
2. « La première pendule, di
sait Walpole à propos des auteurs
qui cherchaient
-
Il a eu assez de hardiesse et de justesse de goût pour admirer
Shakespeare, et, notons-le bien, tout
-
Shakespeare : il a manque
d’audace dans l’exécution, et sa poésie, plus timide que sa cri
tique, ne
-
Voilà le défaut de Ducis : il
met du roman partout, il en ajoute
à Shakespeare!
-
Shakespeare et Racine........................................................................... 155
-
Contre un traducteur de Shakespeare................................
-
Voltaire et Shakespeare................................................................
95
7.
-
Voltaire traducteur de Shakespeare............................................ 258
2.
-
Shakespeare..........................................................................
3.
-
SHAKESPEARE. Jules César
(C. Fleming)...........................
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:6
Texto
- Título:
-
Eighteenth-Century french plays / edited by Clarence D. Brenner and Nolan A. Goodyear - 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
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (9
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
His acquaintance with English
tragedy, in particular with the plays of Shakespeare, formed during his
-
produced three
plays, Brzitus (1730), Eriphyle (1732), Zaïre (1732), which contain reminis
cences of Shakespeare
-
credited
to Ducis, who in the latter years of the century produced a number of adapta
tions from Shakespeare
-
F. baldensperger: Esquisse d’une histoire de Shakespeare en France, in Études d’his
toire littéraire
-
«haines: Shakespeare in France.
-
J- J. jusserand : Shakespeare en France sous l’ancien régime, Paris, 1899.
-
In Plautus the plot is very simple, while Re-
REGNARD
43
gnard, like Shakespeare in The Comedy of
-
Voltaire, Paris, 1886. f. brunetière: Les Époques
du theatre français, Paris, 1892, e. j. dubedout : Shakespeare
-
from the oonvenfrons of the stage of the Cornedi«‘
theme does predominate, yet it is y no
25““™
the
Shakespeare
- Formatos:
-
-
Resultado número:7
Texto
- Título:
-
Shorter novels - 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.:
- London [etc.] : J.M. Dent and sons ; New York : E. P. Dutton, 1930
- Materias:
-
Narrativa inglesa -- Siglo 18º | Novela inglesa -- Siglo 18º
- Fragmentos
'shakespeare' en la obra
: (3
coincidencias encontradas)
-
-
And as, for many readers, Shakespeare was grown bar
barous, there had to be a greater refinement of
-
these obscure
forerunners of Fielding as much, and in the same way, as
we are to the predecessors of Shakespeare
-
that
the description of a cathedral in the first scene of the second
act was superior to anything in Shakespeare
- Formatos:
-
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Escritores ingleses -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia 1
- Escritores norteamericanos -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia 1
- Literatura francesa -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías 1
- Literatura francesa -- Siglo 19º -- Historia y crítica 1
- Narrativa inglesa -- Siglo 18º 1
- Novela inglesa -- Siglo 18º 1
- Poesía americana 1
- Poesía inglesa 1
- Romanticismo -- Francia 1
- Teatro inglés -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías 1
Datos extraídos de Wikidata
- No disponible7 [Eliminar filtro]
- Biblioteca de la Universidad de Alicante 7 [Eliminar filtro]
Filtros aplicados:
-
Resultado número:1 Texto
- Título:
- The romantic movement in French literature : traced by a series of texts / selected and edited by H.F. Stewart and Arthur Tilley, M. A. - 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.:
- Cambridge : The University Press, 1917
- Materias:
- Romanticismo -- Francia | Literatura francesa -- Siglo 19º -- Historia y crítica
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- Caroline (who afterwards married Schelling the philosopher), Germans are almost justified in claiming Shakespeare
- Stendhal, Racine et Shakespeare, p. 2. 12 MADAME DE STAËL: DE L’ALLEMAGNE Un des grands avantages
- Shakespeare est autant admiré par le peuple en Angleterre que par la classe supérieure.
- Shakespeare, qu’on veut appeler un barbare , a peutêtre un esprit trop philosophique, une pénétration
- A force d’esprit, Shakespeare refroidit souvent 1.action, et es Français s’entendent beaucoup mieux à
- dira-t-on, peut-on reprocher à Shakespeare trop de finesse dans les aperçus, lui qui se permit des situations
- Shakespeare réunit souvent des qualités et même des défauts con traires ; il est quelquefois en deçà
- En Angleterre, toutes les classes sont également attirées par les pièces de Shakespeare.
- Stendhal, Racine et Shakespeare, p. 18.
- He admired Delille, and thought Corneille and Racine superior to Shakespeare and Schiller.
- Jean-François Ducis (1733-1816) introduced Shakespeare to the French stage, though in an extremely Gallicized
- Ainsi Vhorloge qui, au grand amusement de Voltaire3, désigne au Brutus de Shakespeare l’heure où il doit
- Que vous soyez l’écho de Racine ou le reflet de Shakespeare, vous n’êtes toujours qu’un écho et qu’un
- Meanwhile with no less vigour and fecundity Alex andre Dumas, fired by the contact with Shakespeare,
- Les deux génies rivaux unissent leur double flamme, et de cette flamme jaillit Shakespeare.
- Shakespeare, c’est le drame ; et le drame, qui fond sous un même souffle le grotesque et le sublime,
- Beaumarchais était morose, Molière était sombre, Shakespeare mélancolique.
- Racine et Shakespeare, p. 40.
- D’ailleurs, Voltaire, qui ne veut pas de Shakespeare, ne veut pas des Grecs non plus.
- La tragédie n’est pas pour cette école ce quelle est pour le bonhomme Gilles1 Shakespeare, par exemple
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:2 Texto
- Título:
- Facing forward. Poems of courage / collected by Joseph Morris and St. Clair Adams - 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, George Sully & company, cop. 1925
- Materias:
- Poesía inglesa | Poesía americana
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (11 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- William Shakespeare.. . 153 Contentment ..........................
- William Shakespeare... Mother 0’ Mine..................... Rudyard Kipling............
- William Shakespeare Stick to It............................... Edgar A. Guest..............'
- William Shakespeare William Shakespeare Darrell Figgis.......... Wanted..............
- William Shakespeare, 21 BARB-WIRE BILL There is nothing more inspiring in human nature than the willingness
- W William Shakespeare. 4i THE MAN WHO BRINGS UP THE REAR END It is not always the conspicuous who
- William Shakespeare. 96 O IFE’S a Battle, full of stress, Full of Change, Struggle, Combat, Weariness
- M William Shakespeare. 153 IN A FRIENDLY SORT O’ WAY THE DREAMS AHEAD Luther Burbank is known the
- William Shakespeare. 183 And the birds, in shadows dim, Sang their sweetest over him.
- Shakespeare played one of the roles in his comedy “Every Man in His Humour” 1598.
- Shakespeare, William.
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:3 Texto
- Título:
- Nineteenth century letters / selected and edited, with an introduction, by Byron Johnson Rees - 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 ; Chicago ; Boston, C. Scribners Sons, cop. 1919
- Materias:
- Escritores ingleses -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia | Escritores norteamericanos -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- He is the Robert Blake,f whose wild designs accompany a * Shakespeare. Dr.
- We next passed a night and part of the next day at Stratford-on-Avon, visiting the house where Shakespeare
- Shakespeare may or may not Hit. 42] BENJAMIN ROBERT HAYDON 149 have been born in the room shown;
- he made his purchase; and as people, except on singu lar emergencies, are generally born upstairs, Shakespeare
- , while the sheep dotted about on the glittering green where the sun streaked in, an nounced where Shakespeare
- They spoke‘to me as if Shakespeare was whispering in my ear.
- The housekeeper, a pleasant woman, said, “Here is the hall where Sir Thomas tried Shakespeare.”
- “Well,” said I, “did you ever hear of Shakespeare ?” “Heer of un, ah!” (puff!
- In the passage I found a head of Shakespeare, which I had not before seen.
- I’ll tell you what—on the 23rd was Shakespeare bom.
- Shakespeare that may have come rather new to you, which must be continually happening, notwith standing
- He seems im patient that even Shakespeare should be admired: “so much out of my own pocket!”
- Fanny Kemble is reading Shakespeare.
- Donne [SHAKESPEARE; LIFE OF COLERIDGE] [London, 17 Gloucester Street, Queen Square] 1834.
- It is Shakespeare. Woodbridge, April 16, 1878.
- The other night some men were talking of Dickens and Bulwer as if they were equal to Shakespeare, and
- Little did John Chinaman dream what he was making, as little as John Shakespeare knew that he had begotten
- Homer, Plato, Dante, Shakespeare, Cervantes, Goethe— are they not everlasting boundary-stones that mark
- Men to whom I bow my head (Shakespeare, Goethe; and in their way, Molière, Cervantes) are Realists au
- The prose in Shakespeare and in Congreve is perfect.
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:4 Texto
- Título:
- Eighteenth-century plays - 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.:
- London : J. M. Dent and Sons ; New york : E. P. Dutton, 1928
- Materia:
- Teatro inglés -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (18 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- Shakespeare was accepted in strange perversions.
- e has a perm anent place in the history of English literature as the first editor and biographer of Shakespeare
- and F letcher and other Elizabethans continued to hold the stage, though often in adaptations, and Shakespeare
- T h at it was “ w ritten in im itation of Shakespeare s style is not apparent; b u t th e w riter has
- notable features of G arrick’s m anagem ent of D rury Lane (1747-76) were his reviváis of comedies b y Shakespeare
- When Learning’s triumph o’er her barb’rous foes First rear’d the stage, immortal Shakespeare rose; Each
- a posthumous pubhcation was much esteemed; and he was the first systematic editor and biographer of Shakespeare
- In suoh an age, immortal Shakespeare wrote, By no quaint rules, ñor hampering crities taught; With rough
- present what hath caused such feuds in the learned world, whether this piece was originally written by Shakespeare
- iu this place to commend the great care ot our author to preserve the metre of blank verse, in which Shakespeare
- Shakespeare, who has given such amazing proofs of his genius, in that as well as in comedy, in his Hamlet
- Besides writing many successful plays, some of them brilliant, he adapted plays of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson
- that Shakespeare was no fool! Col. T. I’m gíad you like him, sir!— So ends the pool!
- — I seldom blush.— For little Shakespeare, faith! I’d take a push! Lord Min. News, news!
- It is Shakespeare, with his “ daffodils That come before the swallow dares, and take The winds of March
- 287 Coleridge’s Biographia, 1 1 ,, Shirley, 288 ,, Golden Book, 43 ,, Villette, 351 ,, Lectures on Shakespeare
- Kingston’s Peter the Whaler, 6 „ Three Midshipmen, 7 Kirby’s Kalevala, 259-60 Koran, 380 Lamb’s Tales from Shakespeare
- Plays, 95 Sismondi’s Italian Republics, 250 Thackeray’s Esmond, 73 „ Vanity Fair, 298 Smeaton’s Life of Shakespeare
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:5 Texto
- Título:
- Choix des lettres du XVIIIe siècle / publiées avec une introduction, des notices et des notes par Gustave Lanson - 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.:
- Paris, Librairie Hachette et Cie., 1906
- Materia:
- Literatura francesa -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (20 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- . — VOLTAIRE ET SHAKESPEARE. A Monsieur l’abbé Desfontaines 3. A Cirey, le 14 novembre 4735.
- , monsieur, ce n’est Pas a vous d empêcher les hommes de lire, vous y perdriez trop, etc. ’JP 36. — SHAKESPEARE
- C’était Diderot qui lui en avait donné le conseil. 175 4L — CONTRE UN TRADUCTEUR DE SHAKESPEARE.
- Cette dame était venue à I in-8, sa traduction de Shakespeare, erney en 1766 : elle était idolâtre I
- Je vous embrasse de tout mon cœur. 4. — VOLTAIRE TRADUCTEUR DE SHAKESPEARE. AU MÊME.
- Quelque absurde que me paraisse la pièce de Shakespeare, quelque grossiers que soient réellement les
- Il a ainsi "u'e“t Shakespeare, et les prédicateurs I traits de poète, des images lyiW 253 veille; je
- Elle a mal jugé Corneille et méconnu Shakespeare : elle a senti le sublime de Corneille et la puissance
- de Shakespeare.
- car depuis feu Protée, personne n’a été si dissemblable d’un jour à l’autre que vous l'êtes. 10. — SHAKESPEARE
- Shakespeare était son idole. 2. « La première pendule, di sait Walpole à propos des auteurs qui cherchaient
- Il a eu assez de hardiesse et de justesse de goût pour admirer Shakespeare, et, notons-le bien, tout
- Shakespeare : il a manque d’audace dans l’exécution, et sa poésie, plus timide que sa cri tique, ne
- Voilà le défaut de Ducis : il met du roman partout, il en ajoute à Shakespeare!
- Shakespeare et Racine........................................................................... 155
- Contre un traducteur de Shakespeare................................
- Voltaire et Shakespeare................................................................ 95 7.
- Voltaire traducteur de Shakespeare............................................ 258 2.
- Shakespeare.......................................................................... 3.
- SHAKESPEARE. Jules César (C. Fleming)...........................
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:6 Texto
- Título:
- Eighteenth-Century french plays / edited by Clarence D. Brenner and Nolan A. Goodyear - 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
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (9 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- His acquaintance with English tragedy, in particular with the plays of Shakespeare, formed during his
- produced three plays, Brzitus (1730), Eriphyle (1732), Zaïre (1732), which contain reminis cences of Shakespeare
- credited to Ducis, who in the latter years of the century produced a number of adapta tions from Shakespeare
- F. baldensperger: Esquisse d’une histoire de Shakespeare en France, in Études d’his toire littéraire
- «haines: Shakespeare in France.
- J- J. jusserand : Shakespeare en France sous l’ancien régime, Paris, 1899.
- In Plautus the plot is very simple, while Re- REGNARD 43 gnard, like Shakespeare in The Comedy of
- Voltaire, Paris, 1886. f. brunetière: Les Époques du theatre français, Paris, 1892, e. j. dubedout : Shakespeare
- from the oonvenfrons of the stage of the Cornedi«‘ theme does predominate, yet it is y no 25““™ the Shakespeare
- Formatos:
-
Resultado número:7 Texto
- Título:
- Shorter novels - 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.:
- London [etc.] : J.M. Dent and sons ; New York : E. P. Dutton, 1930
- Materias:
- Narrativa inglesa -- Siglo 18º | Novela inglesa -- Siglo 18º
- Fragmentos 'shakespeare' en la obra : (3 coincidencias encontradas)
-
- And as, for many readers, Shakespeare was grown bar barous, there had to be a greater refinement of
- these obscure forerunners of Fielding as much, and in the same way, as we are to the predecessors of Shakespeare
- that the description of a cathedral in the first scene of the second act was superior to anything in Shakespeare
- Formatos:
Filtros de la búsqueda
- Escritores ingleses -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia 1
- Escritores norteamericanos -- Siglo 19º -- Correspondencia 1
- Literatura francesa -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías 1
- Literatura francesa -- Siglo 19º -- Historia y crítica 1
- Narrativa inglesa -- Siglo 18º 1
- Novela inglesa -- Siglo 18º 1
- Poesía americana 1
- Poesía inglesa 1
- Romanticismo -- Francia 1
- Teatro inglés -- Siglo 18º -- Antologías 1
Datos extraídos de Wikidata
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- Biblioteca de la Universidad de Alicante 7 [Eliminar filtro]