Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 36 |
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Page 79
It has yielded us alphabets of sight and sound with which we character our mythologies , those mythologies , public and private , which are at once the evidence and fulfilment of our being . And we repay to the outer world that unity ...
It has yielded us alphabets of sight and sound with which we character our mythologies , those mythologies , public and private , which are at once the evidence and fulfilment of our being . And we repay to the outer world that unity ...
Page 80
situation rather than a character's awareness of the situation that we have in the comedies and in all the earlier plays . The development of Shakespeare's power of exhibiting a character's inner life is one of the clear marks of his ...
situation rather than a character's awareness of the situation that we have in the comedies and in all the earlier plays . The development of Shakespeare's power of exhibiting a character's inner life is one of the clear marks of his ...
Page 88
He lives in our imagination in a way that , except for a line or two , happens to no earlier character . ... Much of the importance of Shakespeare's minor characters consists in their providing such a context . Spectators are much more ...
He lives in our imagination in a way that , except for a line or two , happens to no earlier character . ... Much of the importance of Shakespeare's minor characters consists in their providing such a context . Spectators are much more ...
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Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir H I Bell | 15 |
ALESSANDRO MANZONI Italian Lecture By A P dEntrèves | 23 |
MORAL PRINCIPLES AND INDUCTIVE POLICIES Philosophical | 51 |
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