Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volumen149William Blackwood, 1891 |
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Página 1
... play'd to take spectators . " In accordance with his wellnigh uniform practice , Shakespeare bor- rowed the main incidents of this play from one of the popular stories of his day . Strangely enough , in this instance he had recourse to ...
... play'd to take spectators . " In accordance with his wellnigh uniform practice , Shakespeare bor- rowed the main incidents of this play from one of the popular stories of his day . Strangely enough , in this instance he had recourse to ...
Página 2
... play which he recast , or for which he had taken hints from stories told by other men . So far from bearing Shakespeare a grudge for using his tale , " Pandosto , or the Triumphs of Time , " as the foun- dation of " The Winter's Tale ...
... play which he recast , or for which he had taken hints from stories told by other men . So far from bearing Shakespeare a grudge for using his tale , " Pandosto , or the Triumphs of Time , " as the foun- dation of " The Winter's Tale ...
Página 3
... play , is made peculiarly unpleasant by the passion Pan- dosto conceives for his own child , when she seeks refuge with her lover at his Court , and the wind- ing up of the story with his suicide in a fit of remorse for having enter ...
... play , is made peculiarly unpleasant by the passion Pan- dosto conceives for his own child , when she seeks refuge with her lover at his Court , and the wind- ing up of the story with his suicide in a fit of remorse for having enter ...
Página 5
... play - fellow . " Playfully rallying Polixenes upon the suggestion here implied , that his queen and herself have been their tempters to evil , Hermione rejoins : - . " Grace to boot ! Of this make no conclusion , lest you say Your ...
... play - fellow . " Playfully rallying Polixenes upon the suggestion here implied , that his queen and herself have been their tempters to evil , Hermione rejoins : - . " Grace to boot ! Of this make no conclusion , lest you say Your ...
Página 9
... play , than the brief scene with which the second act opens ? The boy Mamillius , of whom Archidamus had spoken as the " gallant child , " the " gentle- man of the greatest promise that ever came into his note , " uncon- scious of the ...
... play , than the brief scene with which the second act opens ? The boy Mamillius , of whom Archidamus had spoken as the " gallant child , " the " gentle- man of the greatest promise that ever came into his note , " uncon- scious of the ...
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