Notes and Lectures Upon Shakespeare: And Some of the Old Poets and Dramatists with Other Literary Remains of S.T. ColeridgeWilliam Pickering, 1849 |
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Page 33
... racters appealed to the reason rather than to the mere understanding , inasmuch as they supposed an ideal state rather than referred to an existing reality , yet it was a reason which was obliged to accommodate itself to the senses ...
... racters appealed to the reason rather than to the mere understanding , inasmuch as they supposed an ideal state rather than referred to an existing reality , yet it was a reason which was obliged to accommodate itself to the senses ...
Page 83
... racters are also peculiar . A drunken constable was not uncommon ; but he makes folly a vehicle for wit , as in Dogberry : every thing is a sub - stratum * See the Notes on Hamlet , which contain the same general view of the character ...
... racters are also peculiar . A drunken constable was not uncommon ; but he makes folly a vehicle for wit , as in Dogberry : every thing is a sub - stratum * See the Notes on Hamlet , which contain the same general view of the character ...
Page 194
... racters and sentiments so frequent in our elder co- medies . There is the younger brother , for instance , in Beaumont and Fletcher's play of the Scornful Lady , on the one side , and Oliver in Shakspeare's As You Like It , on the other ...
... racters and sentiments so frequent in our elder co- medies . There is the younger brother , for instance , in Beaumont and Fletcher's play of the Scornful Lady , on the one side , and Oliver in Shakspeare's As You Like It , on the other ...
Page 207
... racters is , to conceive any one intellectual or moral faculty in morbid excess , and then to place himself , Shakspeare , thus mutilated or diseased , under given circumstances . In Hamlet he seems to have wished to exemplify the moral ...
... racters is , to conceive any one intellectual or moral faculty in morbid excess , and then to place himself , Shakspeare , thus mutilated or diseased , under given circumstances . In Hamlet he seems to have wished to exemplify the moral ...
Page 245
... , compared with the language of vulgar dramatists , whose cha- racters seem to have made their speeches as the actors learn them . Ib . Duncan's speech : - Sons , kinsmen , thanes , And you whose places NOTES ON MACBETH . 245.
... , compared with the language of vulgar dramatists , whose cha- racters seem to have made their speeches as the actors learn them . Ib . Duncan's speech : - Sons , kinsmen , thanes , And you whose places NOTES ON MACBETH . 245.
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admirable appear audience Beaumont and Fletcher beauty Bolingbroke Brutus Cæsar cause character Coleridge comedy Coriolanus Cymbeline drama dramatists effect excellent exquisite fancy father feeling fool genius give Greek Hamlet harmony hath heart heaven Henry historical honour human Iago Iago's images imagination imitation instance intellect Jonson judgment Julius Cæsar King language Lear Lear's Lect lectures Love's Love's Labour's Lost Macbeth means ment metre mind moral nature noble object observe Othello passage passion perhaps play poem poet poetic poetry Polonius present racters remark Richard Richard III Romeo and Juliet scene Schlegel seems sense Shak Shakspeare Shakspeare never Shakspeare's Shakspearian sion speak speare speech spirit supposed thee Theobald thing thou thought tion Titus Andronicus tragedy Troilus and Cressida true truth Twelfth Night unity verse whilst whole words writer