Poets and Playwrights: Shakespeare, Jonson, Spenser, MiltonU of Minnesota Press, 1967 - 282 páginas Poets and Playwrights was first published in 1967. Minnesota Archive Editions uses digital technology to make long-unavailable books once again accessible, and are published unaltered from the original University of Minnesota Press editions. Poets and Playwrights is a collection of nine essays by the eminent Shakespearean scholar and critic, the late Elmer Edgar Stoll. In this work, which was first published by the University of Minnesota Press in 1930, Professor Stoll presents his maturest consideration of the art of the poets and playwrights of his subtitleShakespeare, Jonson, Spenser, and Milton. The most extensive essay, "Shakespeare and the Moderns," includes, in Mr. Stoll's words, "a review of Shakespeare as I conceive him, in order the better to compare him with those who in some respect or other are his peers." |
Conteúdo
CLEOPATRA | 3 |
HENRY V | 30 |
SHAKESPEARE AND THE MODERNS | 52 |
THE OLD DRAMA AND THE NEW | 127 |
THE STAGE AND THE HOUSE | 139 |
SPENSER | 153 |
WAS PARADISE WELL LOST? | 187 |
CERTAIN FALLACIES AND IRRELEVANCIES IN THE LITERARY SCHOLARSHIP OF THE DAY | 193 |
MILTON PURITAN OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY | 221 |
273 | |
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Poets and Playwrights: Shakespeare, Jonson, Spenser, Milton Elmer Edgar Stoll Visualização parcial - 1967 |
Termos e frases comuns
action Adam Æschylus ancient angels Antony appears Archer artist audience beauty character classical Cleopatra comedy comic contrast Corneille Corneille and Racine critics Dante Dante's death delight devils drama dramatist effect Elizabethan emotions English esthetic exquisite external eyes fairly Falstaff French Greek Hamlet hand heart Heaven Hell Henry hero human Iago Ibsen imagination Jonson Keats keeps King Lear knight Lady less light literature lovers Macbeth matter means medieval method Milton modern Molière moral murder mystery nature Othello Paradise Lost Paradise Regained passion person phrase play poem poet poet's poetic poetry point of view present Professor Puritan Queen Raleigh reality Renaissance Richard III romantic Satan scene seen sense Shake Shakespeare Silent Woman situation soliloquy Sophocles soul speak spectators speech Spenser spirit stage story style sure suspense theater thing thou thought tion touch tragedy tragic turn utterance verse virtue Volpone woman words