The Dramatist, 1-5. sējumi

Pirmais vāks
Luther Anthony (B.)
Dramatist Company, 1912

No grāmatas satura

Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu

Bieži izmantoti vārdi un frāzes

Populāri fragmenti

10. lappuse - Yes, he is a miracle of genius, because he is a miracle of labor ; because, instead of trusting to the resources of his own single mind, he has ransacked a thousand minds ; because he makes use of the accumulated wisdom of ages, and takes, as his point of departure, the very last line and boundary to which science has advanced ; because it has ever been the object of his life to assist every intellectual gift of nature, however munificent, and however splendid, with every resource that art could...
10. lappuse - Then do the multitude cry out "a miracle of genius!" Yes, he is a miracle of genius, because he is a miracle of labour; because, instead of trusting to the resources of his own single mind, he has ransacked a thousand minds; because he makes use of the accumulated wisdom of ages, and takes as his point of departure the very last line and boundary to which science has advanced; because it has ever been the object...
299. lappuse - Annie and David are talking together. He can see them both, but David cannot see him. Annie and Morris converse in whispers. The cuckoo song begins to be played softly. MORRIS. Is he worse ? ANNIE (looking at Morris beseechingly). I cannot tell, sir, but he's longin' to hear the cuckoo sing again. MORRIS. I see, and you are wishing to do it again ? ANNIE. Yiss, an' with the lad dyin', can ye tell me not to do what Davy is askin' for ? Each time might be his last, sir.
151. lappuse - Puritans by making so lewd a place as the playhouse a public charge; and there be a thousand things to be done in this London of mine before your poetry can have its penny from the general purse. I tell thee, Master Will, it will be three hundred years and more before my subjects learn that man cannot live by bread alone, but by every word that cometh from the mouth of those whom God inspires.
294. lappuse - Tis that she is needin' whatever. Warn her well. GUTO Yiss, an' rebuke her. LOWRY Ye're young, sir, but ye're the instrument of the Lord whatever. 'Tis your duty to bring her back to her conscience. GUTO Amen. {.Lowry and Guto go off very self-righteous and looking triumphantly at Annie, who, quiet, her face pale and weary, turns to her washing and rubs and rinses diligently while the minister is talking. MORRIS (gently) I've been troubled, for I knew that it would come to this, Annie. I should have...
299. lappuse - It must be singin' again soon. DAVID [anxiously]. Ye're sure 'tis goin' to sing ? ANNIE [gathering him up and turning his pillow]. Indeed, yiss, an' with the windows all open, ye'll be hearin' it fine an' clear, ye will. I'll go back up into the garden to see is the cuckoo there. DAVID. Will it be singin' over an' over again, the way it did that first time ? ANNIE. Aye, I'm thinkin
367. lappuse - In your own art, bow your head over technique. Think of technique when you rise and when you go to bed. Forget purposes in the meanwhile; get to love technical processes; to glory in technical successes; get to see the world entirely through technical spectacles, to see it entirely in terms of what you can do. Then when you have anything to say, the language will be apt and copious.
299. lappuse - Aye, lad dear, I'm comin'. [She goes into cottage and, after opening all the windows, stands by the foot of DAVID'S bed.] DAVID. Have ye heard the cuckoo singin' ? ANNIE. No, not yet. It must be singin
227. lappuse - It is requisite, therefore, that as in other imitative arts one imitation is the imitation of one thing, thus, also, [in tragedy], the fable, since it is an imitation of action, should be the imitation of one action, and of the whole of this, and that the parts of the transactions should be so arranged, that any one of them being transposed, or taken away, the whole would become different and changed. For that which when present or not present produces no sensible [difference], is not a part of the...
7. lappuse - ... the reason most men do not accomplish more is because they do not attempt more.

Bibliogrāfiskā informācija