The Sources of Shakespeare's PlaysRoutledge, 4 kwi 2014 - 336 First published in 1977. This book ascertains what sources Shakespeare used for the plots of his plays and discusses the use he made of them; and secondly illustrates how his general reading is woven into the texture of his work. Few Elizabethan dramatists took such pains as Shakespeare in the collection of source-material. Frequently the sources were apparently incompatible, but Shakespeare's ability to combine a chronicle play, one or two prose chronicles, two poems and a pastoral romance without any sense of incongruity, was masterly. The plays are examined in approximately chronological order and Shakespeare's developing skill becomes evident. |
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Strona 2
... lines by Persius which , we are told , Shakespeare could have read in the notes to Mantuan : 10 nunc non e tumulo fortunataque favilla nascentur violae ? On the other hand , since Shakespeare alludes to two of Horace's poems in the ...
... lines by Persius which , we are told , Shakespeare could have read in the notes to Mantuan : 10 nunc non e tumulo fortunataque favilla nascentur violae ? On the other hand , since Shakespeare alludes to two of Horace's poems in the ...
Strona 3
... line in one of Horace's Satires ( 11. 5 ) - Furius hibernas cana nive conspuet Alpes- must surely be the origin of ... lines : vivaque saxa , sua convulsaque robora terra , et silvas moveo . Golding translates : ( VII . 204-5 ) And ...
... line in one of Horace's Satires ( 11. 5 ) - Furius hibernas cana nive conspuet Alpes- must surely be the origin of ... lines : vivaque saxa , sua convulsaque robora terra , et silvas moveo . Golding translates : ( VII . 204-5 ) And ...
Strona 8
... line from Hero and Leander in As You Like It , and referred there to Marlowe as ' dead shepherd ' . But , as everyone recog- nizes , his debt to Marlowe was more profound . His own blank verse was developed from Marlowe's ' mighty line ...
... line from Hero and Leander in As You Like It , and referred there to Marlowe as ' dead shepherd ' . But , as everyone recog- nizes , his debt to Marlowe was more profound . His own blank verse was developed from Marlowe's ' mighty line ...
Strona 10
... line in one of his plays may combine echoes of more than one source . When , for example , the Clown tells Autolyous , ' We are but plain fellows , sir ' , and he replies , ' A lie : you are rough and hairy ' ( IV . iv . 710-11 ) , he ...
... line in one of his plays may combine echoes of more than one source . When , for example , the Clown tells Autolyous , ' We are but plain fellows , sir ' , and he replies , ' A lie : you are rough and hairy ' ( IV . iv . 710-11 ) , he ...
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Antony appears Appian Arden argued audience banished Brutus Bullough Caesar Cassio Caxton character Chronicles Cinthio's Cleopatra Comedy Comedy of Errors Coriolanus Cressida critics Cymbeline Daniel death derived described Disdemona doth Dover Wilson dramatic dramatist E. K. Chambers echoes Elizabethan Falstaff Famous Victories father Greene's Hamlet hath haue Hector Henry hero heroine Holinshed Holinshed's Honigmann Iago Iago's ibid influenced Isabella John Juliet King Lear Latin Leontes lines loue lovers Lydgate Macbeth marriage marry Menaechmi mentioned Mirror for Magistrates Muir murder night Othello Pandosto parallels passage Pericles phrase plot Plutarch poem Prince Pyramus Pyramus and Thisbe refers revenge Richard Richard II Romeo Rosader Rosalind scene Shake Shakespeare had read Shakespeare's play sources speaks speare speare's speech story suggested T. W. Baldwin tale tells thee thou tragedy translation Troilus Troublesome Raigne Twelfth Night Ur-Hamlet villain vnto vpon wife words