Animal Analogy in Shakespeare's Character Portrayal |
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Page 16
... true ! The raven doth not hatch a lark : Yet have I heard , O ! could I find it now , The lion moved with pity did endure 22 To have his princely paws pared all away . ” Except for the lion's being moved with pity and not with love , an ...
... true ! The raven doth not hatch a lark : Yet have I heard , O ! could I find it now , The lion moved with pity did endure 22 To have his princely paws pared all away . ” Except for the lion's being moved with pity and not with love , an ...
Page 61
... true of the dramatist who gave the world some of the noblest characters it has known . Shakespeare's true opinion of true Man is to be found , we feel , not in a vision of a world peopled with human beasts or beastly human beings , but ...
... true of the dramatist who gave the world some of the noblest characters it has known . Shakespeare's true opinion of true Man is to be found , we feel , not in a vision of a world peopled with human beasts or beastly human beings , but ...
Page 62
... true that to the Elizabethans with their more immedi- ate background of animal tradition , Aesop and animal physiognomy , and similar literary heritages , the animal comparisons appearing in Shakespeare's plays came less as " faded ...
... true that to the Elizabethans with their more immedi- ate background of animal tradition , Aesop and animal physiognomy , and similar literary heritages , the animal comparisons appearing in Shakespeare's plays came less as " faded ...
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Aesop Aesop's Fables Ajax allusion animal analogy animal comparisons animal figures animal imagery Animal Lore Antony Appendix Aristotle basilisk bear beast birds boar Bullokar Caliban Camerarius Caxton character portrayal characterization cock Company Coriolanus costumes creatures crow Cymbeline deer devils disguises dragon eagle edition Elizabeth Elizabethan English Translation Fables of Aesop Fabula Falstaff feathers fish Goneril Greek Hamlet hath head Henry Henry IV Henry VI horse human hunter Iago's Ibid images King Lear lamb lion Lion's Skin Loeb Classical Library London Macbeth Malvolio Metamorphoses monster moral mouse Natural History Note Othello phoenix physiognomy play Pliny Porta portray prey Queen references Revels Richard Richard III Romeo satiric satyrs says Scot serpent Shakespeare Shakespeare's day sketches snake story tail tells Temp Thersites Thomas thou Timon of Athens tions Titus Andronicus toad Trinculo Troilus and Cressida University Press William Heinemann witch wolf York