Theatre and Drama in the Making, Band 1Houghton Mifflin, 1964 - 1071 Seiten |
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Seite 460
... Hamlet venture his soul on the event , and rather trust that than a messenger from the other world , though it assumed , as he expresses it , his noble father's form , and assured him that it was his spirit . " I'll have , " says Hamlet ...
... Hamlet venture his soul on the event , and rather trust that than a messenger from the other world , though it assumed , as he expresses it , his noble father's form , and assured him that it was his spirit . " I'll have , " says Hamlet ...
Seite 499
... Hamlet himself what does he suffer meanwhile by being dragged forth as the public schoolmaster , to give lectures to the crowd ! Why , nine parts in ten of what Hamlet does , are transactions between himself and his moral sense ; they ...
... Hamlet himself what does he suffer meanwhile by being dragged forth as the public schoolmaster , to give lectures to the crowd ! Why , nine parts in ten of what Hamlet does , are transactions between himself and his moral sense ; they ...
Seite 611
... Hamlet's churchyard passion . But let it not for a moment be supposed that Hamlet ended in an anti - climax . A fencing scene between Hamlet and Laertes , which would have rejoiced the heart of M. Angelo , and which will , owing to the ...
... Hamlet's churchyard passion . But let it not for a moment be supposed that Hamlet ended in an anti - climax . A fencing scene between Hamlet and Laertes , which would have rejoiced the heart of M. Angelo , and which will , owing to the ...
Inhalt
INTRODUCTION | xv |
Theory and Criticism of Tragedy 21 22235 | 21 |
from the Deipnosophists | 39 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Theatre and Drama in the Making: From Antiquity to the Renaissance, Band 1 John Gassner,Ralph G. Allen Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1992 |
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