| 1850 - 642 strani
...exhibitions can prevail with our imaginations — where alone we can be interested and deluded, when we find ourselves in the mid-st, not only of such a confusion...effort necessary in order to sustain it, we owe much of j It must not be supposed that the drama, though what distinguishes Calderon from his predecessors,... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1860 - 592 strani
...of his incidents, and more poetry in the structure and tendency of his dramas. To his elevated tone we owe much of what distinguishes Calderon from his...predecessors, and nearly all that is most individual in his merits and defects. In carrying out his theory of the national drama, he often succeeds and... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1863 - 764 strani
...of his incidents, and more poetry in the structure and tendency of his dramas. To his elevated tone we owe much of what distinguishes Calderon from his...predecessors, and nearly all that is most individual in his merits and defects. In carrying ont his theory of the national drama, he often succeeds and... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1864 - 758 strani
...exhibitions can prevail with our imaginations — where alone we can be interested and deluded, when we find ourselves in the midst, not only of such a confusion...poetry. " To this elevated tone, and to the constant ef. fort necessary in order to sustain it, we owe much of what distinguishes Calderon from his predecessors,... | |
| William Hickling Prescott - 1875 - 638 strani
...exhibitions can prevail with our imaginations, — where alone we can be interested and deluded when we find ourselves in the midst not only of such a confusion...order to sustain it, we owe much of what distinguishes Calderou from his predecessors, and nearly all that is most individual and characteristic in his separate... | |
| Stedman, Edmund C. and Hutchinson Ellen M. - 1888 - 566 strani
...exhibitions can prevail with our imaginations, —where alone we can be interested and deluded, when we find ourselves in the midst, not only of such a confusion...individual and characteristic in his separate merits and effects. It makes him less easy, graceful, and natural than Lope. It imparts to his style a mannerism,... | |
| Anne Charlotte Lynch Botta - 1902 - 592 strani
...of his incidents, and more poetry in the structure and tendency of his dramas. To his elevated tone we owe much of what distinguishes Calderon from his...predecessors, and nearly all that is most individual in his merits and defects. In carrying out his theory of the national drama, he often succeeds and... | |
| Henry Allon - 1850 - 572 strani
...exhibitions can prevail with our imaginations, — where alone we can be interested and deluded, when we find ourselves in the midst, not only of such a confusion...order to sustain it, we owe much of what distinguishes Calderou from his predecessors, and nearly all that is most individual and characteristic in his separate... | |
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