Romeo and JulietPenguin UK, 7 апр. 2005 г. - Всего страниц: 320 'Shakespeare invented the human as we continue to know it' Harold Bloom |
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... sense, the prose as well as the verse employing elaborate figures of speech. Writing at a time of linguistic ferment, Shakespeare frequently imports Latinisms into English, coining words such as abstemious, addiction, incarnadine ...
... sense, the prose as well as the verse employing elaborate figures of speech. Writing at a time of linguistic ferment, Shakespeare frequently imports Latinisms into English, coining words such as abstemious, addiction, incarnadine ...
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... sense of the word, entertain audiences. He is the greatest of poets, but he is essentially a dramatic poet. Though his plays have much to offer to readers, they exist fully only in performance. In these volumes we offer individual ...
... sense of the word, entertain audiences. He is the greatest of poets, but he is essentially a dramatic poet. Though his plays have much to offer to readers, they exist fully only in performance. In these volumes we offer individual ...
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... senses that things have moved too fast, 'Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be | Ere one can say “It lightens” ' (II.2.119–20). Romeo and Tybalt will also go 'to't ... like lightning' (III. 1.172), and Romeo remembers the ...
... senses that things have moved too fast, 'Too like the lightning, which doth cease to be | Ere one can say “It lightens” ' (II.2.119–20). Romeo and Tybalt will also go 'to't ... like lightning' (III. 1.172), and Romeo remembers the ...
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... sense 'performed'.) Dramatists can counteract or complement this sense of the here and now by various means that indicate the lapse of days, months or even years in the course of performance. Shakespeare does this with the help of his ...
... sense 'performed'.) Dramatists can counteract or complement this sense of the here and now by various means that indicate the lapse of days, months or even years in the course of performance. Shakespeare does this with the help of his ...
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... sense of the ordinary world out of which the exceptional events erupt. There are the quarrelsome servants, Sampson, Gregory and Abram, and three or four citizens who try to break up their fight (I.1); there is the Capulet servant who ...
... sense of the ordinary world out of which the exceptional events erupt. There are the quarrelsome servants, Sampson, Gregory and Abram, and three or four citizens who try to break up their fight (I.1); there is the Capulet servant who ...
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actor Apothecary art thou audience bad Quarto Balthasar banishèd bawdy quibble BENVOLIO blood County Paris cousin dead dear death dicult doth dream earth edition editors Elizabethan Enter Romeo Exeunt Exit eyes fair Farewell father feast Friar Laurence give GREGORY grief hand hath heart heaven Here’s holy hour King Lear kiss LADY CAPULET Lammastide light lives look lord love’s lovers Madam Mantua marriage married means Measure for Measure Mercutio Midsummer Night’s Dream Montague mother musicians ne’er night Nurse Nurse’s o’er ower Paris performance perhaps Peter play’s poison Prince Prince’s printed puns Q2 reads Quarto Queen Mab Romeo and Juliet Rosaline Royal Shakespeare Company SAMPSON scene sense servant SERVINGMAN Shakespeare Shakespeare’s play speak speech stay sweet syllables tell thee thou art thou hast thou wilt tomb tragedy Tybalt Verona villain What’s wife word young