The Fair Penitent and Jane ShoreHeath, 1907 - 255 стор. |
З цієї книги
Результати 1-5 із 100
Сторінка iii
... CHANTAL HART , M.A. PROFESSOR OF RHETORIC AND COMPOSITION IN WELLESLEY COLLEGE BOSTON , U. S. A. , AND LONDON D. C. HEATH AND CO . , PUBLISHERS 1907 HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY JUL 28 1952 COPYRIGHT , 1907 , THE FAIR PENITENT.
... CHANTAL HART , M.A. PROFESSOR OF RHETORIC AND COMPOSITION IN WELLESLEY COLLEGE BOSTON , U. S. A. , AND LONDON D. C. HEATH AND CO . , PUBLISHERS 1907 HARVARD UNIVERSITY LIBRARY JUL 28 1952 COPYRIGHT , 1907 , THE FAIR PENITENT.
Сторінка vi
... Fair Penitent in 1703 ; his one attempt at comedy , The Biter , in 1704 ; Ulys- ses in 1706 ; and The Royal Convert in 1707. The Biter fell flat , though Rowe himself is reputed to have laughed immoderately during the performance of it ...
... Fair Penitent in 1703 ; his one attempt at comedy , The Biter , in 1704 ; Ulys- ses in 1706 ; and The Royal Convert in 1707. The Biter fell flat , though Rowe himself is reputed to have laughed immoderately during the performance of it ...
Сторінка ix
... Fair Penitent , in which Goethe acted in a German adaptation . In the last cen- tury , history records performances of The Fair Penitent , " the favorite drama of the town , ” in which Edward , Duke of York , and Lady Stanhope took the ...
... Fair Penitent , in which Goethe acted in a German adaptation . In the last cen- tury , history records performances of The Fair Penitent , " the favorite drama of the town , ” in which Edward , Duke of York , and Lady Stanhope took the ...
Сторінка x
... Fair Penitent were translated into French and republished up to 1825. It is worth while to exam- ine plays which have held so many generations of theatre- goers as The Fair Penitent and Jane Shore , especially when these plays are the ...
... Fair Penitent were translated into French and republished up to 1825. It is worth while to exam- ine plays which have held so many generations of theatre- goers as The Fair Penitent and Jane Shore , especially when these plays are the ...
Сторінка xi
... Fair Penitent and Jane Shore are eighteenth century versions of Elizabethan dramatic methods . Rowe , as we know , planned an edition of Massinger , with the probable intention of doing for him what he did so successfully for ...
... Fair Penitent and Jane Shore are eighteenth century versions of Elizabethan dramatic methods . Rowe , as we know , planned an edition of Massinger , with the probable intention of doing for him what he did so successfully for ...
Інші видання - Показати все
The Fair Penitent and Jane Shore Nicholas Rowe,Philip Massinger,Nathan Field Попередній перегляд недоступний - 2015 |
Загальні терміни та фрази
Alic Alicia Altamont arms beauty behold Bellmour Ben Jonson Betterton Bishop of Ely bless Calista Cates Catesby characters cou'd curse death dost thou dramatic Duke Dumont e'er edition Edward Edward IV eighteenth century Enter ev'n ev'ry Exeunt Exit eyes F omits Fair Penitent fantastick fatal Fatal Dowry father fear folios fond forgive friendship Genest gentle give Glos Gloster grace grief hadst hand happy heart heav'n honour Horatio husband Jane Shore justice king Lavinia live lord chamberlain Lord Hastings Loth Lothario mercy mistress Nahum Tate never NICHOLAS ROWE night noble o'er peace pity play poetical justice pow'r protector publick Ratcliff Richard Rowe Rowe's ruin scene Sciolto Servant Shakespeare shame Shore's wife shou'd sigh sorrows soul tears tell tender thee thou art thou hast TRAGEDY OF JANE virtue wou'd wretch wrong'd
Популярні уривки
Сторінка 236 - My Lord of Ely, when I was last in Holborn, I saw good strawberries in your garden there : I do beseech you send for some of them.
Сторінка 95 - That I must die, it is my only comfort ; Death is the privilege of human nature, And life without it were not worth our taking: " Thither the poor, the pris'ner, and the mourner, \\* " Fly for relief, and lay their burthens down.
Сторінка 225 - What, me, my lord ?' quoth he. ' Yea, thee, traitor,' quoth the protector. And another let fly at the lord Stanley, which shrunk at the stroke and fell under the table, or else his head had been cleft to the teeth ; for as shortly as he shrank, yet ran the blood about his ears. Then...
Сторінка 133 - Think not, the good, The gentle deeds of mercy thou hast done Shall die forgotten all; the poor, the pris'ner, The fatherless, the friendless, and the widow, Who daily own the bounty of thy hand, Shall cry to heav'n, and pull a blessing on thee...
Сторінка 136 - To sooth the sorrows of the midnight mourner, Comfort comes with them ; like the golden sun Dispels the sullen shades with her sweet influence, And cheers the melancholy house of care.
Сторінка 199 - Inclining fondly to me she has sworn, She lov'd me more than all the world beside. Alic. Ha ! say'st thou ! — let me look upon thee well — "° 'T is true — I know thee now — A mischief on thee! — Thou art that fatal fair, that cursed she, That set my brain a madding. Thou hast robb'd me ; Thou hast undone me — Murder ! Oh my Hastings ! See his pale bloody head shoots glaring by me ! 215 Give him me back again, thou soft deluder, Thou beauteous witch — 200 wind.
Сторінка 223 - Chamberlain, as he that for the love between them thought he might be boldest with him, answered and said, That they were worthy to be punished as heinous traitors, whatsoever they were. And all the other affirmed the same. That is (quoth he) yonder sorceress my brother's wife, and other with her (meaning the queen).
Сторінка 168 - If she have such dominion o'er his heart, And turn it at her will, you rule her fate And should, by inference and apt deduction, Be arbiter of his. Is not her bread, The very means immediate to her being, The bounty of your hand ? Why does she live, If not to yield obedience to your pleasure, To speak, to act, to think as you command ? Ratcliffe.
Сторінка 134 - If, strongly charm'd, she leave the thorny way, And in the softer paths of pleasure stray, Ruin ensues, reproach and endless shame, And one false step entirely damns her fame: In vain with tears the loss she may deplore, In vain look back on what she was before; She sets, like stars that fall, to rise no more.