The Sovereign Flower: On Shakespeare as the Poet of Royalism Together with Related Essays and Indexes to Earlier VolumesRoutledge, 28.10.2013 - 328 sivua First published in 2002. This is the final Volume IV of the five G. Wilson Knight collected works series and focuses on Shakespeare as the Poet of Royalism together with related essays and indexes to earlier volumes. The emphasis in this volume is the shift from Shakespeare as the poet of England to Shakespeare as the poet of royalism, in a wide sense. |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 38
Sivu 15
... father , with the dead body ' ; next ' a father that hath killed his son ' . Each in turn proceeds to plunder his prize only to be brought up against the horror of his act . ' Pardon me , God , I knew not what I did ! ' cries one ; and ...
... father , with the dead body ' ; next ' a father that hath killed his son ' . Each in turn proceeds to plunder his prize only to be brought up against the horror of his act . ' Pardon me , God , I knew not what I did ! ' cries one ; and ...
Sivu 16
... father , To lose thy youth in peace , and to achieve The silver livery of advised age , And , in thy reverence and thy chair - days , thus To die in ruffian battle ? Even at this sight My heart is turn'd to stone : and while ' tis mine ...
... father , To lose thy youth in peace , and to achieve The silver livery of advised age , And , in thy reverence and thy chair - days , thus To die in ruffian battle ? Even at this sight My heart is turn'd to stone : and while ' tis mine ...
Sivu 18
... father ' ( 3 Henry VI , ii . vi . 47-51 ) .1 The blood of the slain is felt , by relative or suppor- ter , as rich , sweet , potent , yet piteous . Neither side has any monopoly of these images : the terrible Margaret can be as pathetic ...
... father ' ( 3 Henry VI , ii . vi . 47-51 ) .1 The blood of the slain is felt , by relative or suppor- ter , as rich , sweet , potent , yet piteous . Neither side has any monopoly of these images : the terrible Margaret can be as pathetic ...
Sivu 29
... father , the banished Bolingbroke lands in England to claim his inheritance . On returning from his Irish expedition to meet the re- bellion , Richard solicits our sympathy : He prays I weep for joy To stand upon my kingdom once again ...
... father , the banished Bolingbroke lands in England to claim his inheritance . On returning from his Irish expedition to meet the re- bellion , Richard solicits our sympathy : He prays I weep for joy To stand upon my kingdom once again ...
Sivu 40
Katseluoikeutesi tähän teokseen on päättynyt.
Katseluoikeutesi tähän teokseen on päättynyt.
Sisältö
7 | |
Well | 93 |
Whats in a Name? | 161 |
A Literature and the Nation | 263 |
cA Royal Propaganda | 273 |
The Second Part of King Henry VI and Macbeth | 280 |
E The Principles of Shakespeare Interpretation 1928 | 287 |
A Shakespearian Works | 297 |
General | 318 |
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
action already Antony and Cleopatra appears balance becomes Bertram blood Caesar called Christian close comes Compare contrast criticism Crown death dramatic effect Elizabethan England English especially evil exists express eyes father feel felt final follow force given gives greater Hamlet hand hath heart Heaven Helena Henry hold honour human imperial important interpretation Italy King Lear later less lines live lord Macbeth matters meaning Measure mind nature never once Parolles peace perhaps phrase play poetic poetry positive present Prince recalls recognize reference regard Richard Roman royal royalty scene seems seen sense sexual Shakespeare's Shakespearian significance speak speech spiritual suggestion symbolic Tempest theme thing thou thought throughout Timon tragedy tragic true turn universal values virginity virtue whole young