Yale Studies in English, Volume 19 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 29
Page 60
... Nature ( Ven . 733 ) ; not necessarily hostile , but ' sharp ' and inexora- ble ( Ant . 4. 14. 135 ; Ado 4. 1. 116 ) —this is Shakespeare's conception of Fate in all periods of his work . It is part of Macbeth's curse that he ' shall ...
... Nature ( Ven . 733 ) ; not necessarily hostile , but ' sharp ' and inexora- ble ( Ant . 4. 14. 135 ; Ado 4. 1. 116 ) —this is Shakespeare's conception of Fate in all periods of his work . It is part of Macbeth's curse that he ' shall ...
Page 124
... nature - myth is to be remarked . Wiv . was written in 1599 , directly after H4B . King Henry V. ) H5 furnishes a contrast to the other plays of the same period in the greater seriousness of its mythology . Of the 18 allusions , only ...
... nature - myth is to be remarked . Wiv . was written in 1599 , directly after H4B . King Henry V. ) H5 furnishes a contrast to the other plays of the same period in the greater seriousness of its mythology . Of the 18 allusions , only ...
Page 134
... nature - myth , and the greater divinities receive but scanty attention . There is nothing either in substance or in treatment to prevent one from assigning the play to about the same period as Merch . , in which Ovidian influence is ...
... nature - myth , and the greater divinities receive but scanty attention . There is nothing either in substance or in treatment to prevent one from assigning the play to about the same period as Merch . , in which Ovidian influence is ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Achilles Æneas Ajax alluded Apollo authentic plays Berkeley Berkeley Cæs CALIFORNIA LIBRARY called Caxton Centaurs character Chaucer classical mythology conception Cupid Cymb Diana Dido drama epithet Fasti Gent Golding Golding's greater divinities Greek Hades Hecate Hecuba Hercules Hero and Leander Homer humorous instances Jove Juno Jupiter Latin Lethe lines Lucr Mars masque Medea mentioned Merch Merchant of Venice Mercury Mids myth mythological allusions nature-myth Neptune night noticed Orpheus Ovid Ovid and Vergil Ovid's Ovidian allusion Ovidian story passage passim Perseus personification Ph.D Phoebus phrase playful poem poet Priam Proserpina referred says Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Sonn speare speeches spoken suggests Tereus Theseus Thisbe thou tion translation Troil Troilus and Cressida Trojan war Troy twice Ulysses UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Venus and Adonis Vergil Vergilian Wint