Shakespeare-characters; Chiefly Those SubordinateSmith, Elder & Company, 1863 - 521 páginas |
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... speak , " according to my homely wit ; and I hoped to show passages of beauty that have been either too superficially , even thoughtlessly read , mayhap altogether overlooked , and some delicate points of character that have been ...
... speak , " according to my homely wit ; and I hoped to show passages of beauty that have been either too superficially , even thoughtlessly read , mayhap altogether overlooked , and some delicate points of character that have been ...
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... speak not irreverently ; for , with his divine faith in " goodness in things evil , " and his toleration of the infirmities of his species , Shakespeare was an emanation of the Author of all Good , ) — that all his wonderful harmony of ...
... speak not irreverently ; for , with his divine faith in " goodness in things evil , " and his toleration of the infirmities of his species , Shakespeare was an emanation of the Author of all Good , ) — that all his wonderful harmony of ...
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... her lord with that resolute bearing which shall infuse its spirit into his : - " Great Glamis ! worthy Cawdor ! Greater than both , -by the all hail hereafter ! " The words she uses in speaking of her guest and Macbeth . 9.
... her lord with that resolute bearing which shall infuse its spirit into his : - " Great Glamis ! worthy Cawdor ! Greater than both , -by the all hail hereafter ! " The words she uses in speaking of her guest and Macbeth . 9.
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Charles Cowden Clarke. The words she uses in speaking of her guest and victim , King Duncan , are wonderfully characteristic , and carry with them a slight womanly redemption , which Shakespeare so well knew to convey . She says to her ...
Charles Cowden Clarke. The words she uses in speaking of her guest and victim , King Duncan , are wonderfully characteristic , and carry with them a slight womanly redemption , which Shakespeare so well knew to convey . She says to her ...
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... speak : I am as I have spoken . " Now the indignant honesty of Macduft bursts forth , and stands revealed . " Fit to govern ! No ! not to live ! O Scotland , Scotland ! O nation miserable ! With an untitled tyrant , bloody sceptred ...
... speak : I am as I have spoken . " Now the indignant honesty of Macduft bursts forth , and stands revealed . " Fit to govern ! No ! not to live ! O Scotland , Scotland ! O nation miserable ! With an untitled tyrant , bloody sceptred ...
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Termos e frases comuns
2d Act 3d Serv action affection ambition answer Antony Banquo bear Beatrice beauty Benedick brother Cæsar Caliban Cassio Celia character Clown conduct contrivance Coriolanus cousin coward death Desdemona doth drama Duke Enobarbus eyes faith Falconbridge Falstaff fancy father feeling fellow fool gentle give Hamlet happy hath hear heart Heaven honour Hotspur human humour husband Iago instinct Julius Cæsar king Lady Lear Leonato look lord Macbeth Malvolio master Master Doctor merry mind mistress moral murder nature never night noble Othello passion Percy perfect person philosophy play plot poet poet's Polonius Pompey poor prince Prince Harry qualities queen replies Richard Richard III Rosalind says scene sense Shakespeare Shylock soldier soul speak speech spirit sweet thee thing Thomas Carlyle thou art thought tion true turn Twelfth Night utter virtue whole wife Winter's Tale woman womanly women words worthy young