Blackwood's Magazine, Volume 46W. Blackwood., 1839 - England |
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Results 1-5 of 99
Page 5
... seems abundantly sensible of the nature , tenderness , and pro- fundity of individual passages in Shakspeare ; nay , is isposed to admit , occasionally , even his higher art in comparison with the French dramatists , as well as his ...
... seems abundantly sensible of the nature , tenderness , and pro- fundity of individual passages in Shakspeare ; nay , is isposed to admit , occasionally , even his higher art in comparison with the French dramatists , as well as his ...
Page 7
... seems to think . " Placed side by side with love intrigues and dialogues , in which the argument , however agi- tating , is maintained with a politeness worthy of the school of Chesterfield , his scenes of bloodshed , incest , and crime ...
... seems to think . " Placed side by side with love intrigues and dialogues , in which the argument , however agi- tating , is maintained with a politeness worthy of the school of Chesterfield , his scenes of bloodshed , incest , and crime ...
Page 8
... seems to have conceived that a great deal of the spirit of the roman- tic drama might be thrown into the classical form ; that the natural elo- quence of Antony , the jealousy of the Moor , or the philosophic or sceptical musings and ...
... seems to have conceived that a great deal of the spirit of the roman- tic drama might be thrown into the classical form ; that the natural elo- quence of Antony , the jealousy of the Moor , or the philosophic or sceptical musings and ...
Page 10
... seems inclined to give the preference to Othello's speech to the Venetian Se- nate over the corresponding explana ... seem , according to French ideas , is presented in its most imposing form when accompanied by parricide . The ...
... seems inclined to give the preference to Othello's speech to the Venetian Se- nate over the corresponding explana ... seem , according to French ideas , is presented in its most imposing form when accompanied by parricide . The ...
Page 13
... seems to think him somewhat timorous and time - serving , notwithstanding the ex- cellence of his ordonnances or the irre- proachable character of his life . To Rollin , on the other hand , we think the esprit de corps in favour of a ...
... seems to think him somewhat timorous and time - serving , notwithstanding the ex- cellence of his ordonnances or the irre- proachable character of his life . To Rollin , on the other hand , we think the esprit de corps in favour of a ...
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