The Quarterly Review, Volume 296William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, John Murray, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero John Murray, 1958 |
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Page 125
... play ready for his next appearance on the boards ; many of his lines , therefore , were written when the jet was not playing . But the best parts of his theatre contain hardly a line that does not bear his personal stamp . He needed no ...
... play ready for his next appearance on the boards ; many of his lines , therefore , were written when the jet was not playing . But the best parts of his theatre contain hardly a line that does not bear his personal stamp . He needed no ...
Page 130
... play - acting became popular and respectable . Before Shakespeare's day , apart from the Mystery players , actors were wanderers from town to town , who had to be satisfied with platforms or mere trestle - stages set up in the inn yard ...
... play - acting became popular and respectable . Before Shakespeare's day , apart from the Mystery players , actors were wanderers from town to town , who had to be satisfied with platforms or mere trestle - stages set up in the inn yard ...
Page 133
... plays the allusions to soldiering are indeed so numerous and so natural as to spring , one feels , from the subconscious mind of Shakespeare . They grow less frequent as time goes on , and in his last play , The Tempest , the soldier is ...
... plays the allusions to soldiering are indeed so numerous and so natural as to spring , one feels , from the subconscious mind of Shakespeare . They grow less frequent as time goes on , and in his last play , The Tempest , the soldier is ...
Contents
Is Philosophy Obsolete? | 12 |
Human Relations in the Tropical Girdle of | 58 |
The Canadian General Election and After | 92 |
Copyright | |
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