Leigh Hunt's Dramatic Criticism, 1808-1831, Volume 10Columbia University Press, 1949 - 347 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 48
Page 123
... passages are two with very at- tractive titles - the Vision of Delight , and Pleasure Reconciled to Vertue ; but ... passage in Beaumont and Fletcher will at once illustrate this observation , and show the opinion which two real poets ...
... passages are two with very at- tractive titles - the Vision of Delight , and Pleasure Reconciled to Vertue ; but ... passage in Beaumont and Fletcher will at once illustrate this observation , and show the opinion which two real poets ...
Page 169
... passages taken almost at random . We shall condense our remarks upon them as much as possible , avoiding at the same time the passages which have been extracted in the Edinburgh Review , under the presumption that most of our readers ...
... passages taken almost at random . We shall condense our remarks upon them as much as possible , avoiding at the same time the passages which have been extracted in the Edinburgh Review , under the presumption that most of our readers ...
Page 180
... passages in Mr. Kean's Duke of York , but the character wants abruptness and intense- ness for him . Besides , he ... passage merely because it is unlike others , but because it is like Nature . But if he really does think so , his ...
... passages in Mr. Kean's Duke of York , but the character wants abruptness and intense- ness for him . Besides , he ... passage merely because it is unlike others , but because it is like Nature . But if he really does think so , his ...
Contents
CRITICISM ON SHAKSPEARES MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING | 3 |
MR YOUNGS MERITS CONSIDERED | 21 |
THE CONSCIOUS LOVERS | 35 |
Copyright | |
21 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
acting actor actress admiration appearance Archer and Lowe audience beautiful Beggar's Opera better burlesque character Charles Charles Kemble comedy comic Coriolanus Covent-Garden Critical Essays 1807 dance delight Don Giovanni drama Drury Lane Drury-Lane effect Elliston English excellent expression eyes face fancy Farren feeling genius gentleman give Haymarket Hazlitt humour Hunt Hunt's instance Italian John Juliet Kean Kean's Kemble King King Lear lady Lear Leigh Leigh Hunt Liston look lovers Macbeth Madame Managers manner Mask Miss Mozart nature never night opera Othello Paganini Pantomime passages passion performance perhaps person piece play play-bill Play-Goer pleasant pleasure poet poetry present readers Richard Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene seems Shakspeare Shakspeare's shew Siddons singer songs sort speak spirit stage style sweet taste Tatler theatre Theatrical Examiner thing Timon tion tragedy tragic Twelfth Night voice whole William Hazlitt words writer young