Apology for the Middle Class: The Dramatic Novels of Thomas DeloneyIndiana University Press, 1960 - 165 pages |
From inside the book
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Page 2
... character in a play who turns to the audi- ence and gives a soliloquy . In this " scene , " as elsewhere throughout ... characters appear so palpably real that the reader , from the front row as it were , can almost reach out and touch ...
... character in a play who turns to the audi- ence and gives a soliloquy . In this " scene , " as elsewhere throughout ... characters appear so palpably real that the reader , from the front row as it were , can almost reach out and touch ...
Page 81
... characters . As in Dickens , any one character is simple ; but all the characters are so sharply differentiated that when they interact on each other , their way of life bursts forth in all its complexity . We must remember , of course ...
... characters . As in Dickens , any one character is simple ; but all the characters are so sharply differentiated that when they interact on each other , their way of life bursts forth in all its complexity . We must remember , of course ...
Page 106
... character is very simply constructed , as we have seen in Chapter IV . His movement is almost linear , his impact on ... characters . These rela- tionships often have surprisingly complex implications . One thinks of the scenes involving ...
... character is very simply constructed , as we have seen in Chapter IV . His movement is almost linear , his impact on ... characters . These rela- tionships often have surprisingly complex implications . One thinks of the scenes involving ...
Other editions - View all
Apology for the Middle Class: The Dramatic Novels of Thomas Deloney Merritt E. Lawlis No preview available - 1960 |
Common terms and phrases
action apprentice asks ballads becomes Benedick Cardiff Castle CHAPTER characters cloth clothiers Cole's Crispianus Crispine Deloney's Deloney's novels dialogue Dioclesian Duke Robert E. M. Forster Elizabethan England English Novel entertainment euphuistic French hood Gentle Craft Gillian gives goes Gray of Gloucester Green King Harry Nevell haue Haunce honor husband Iphicrates Jack of Newbury Jack's jestbook John laugh London Long Meg Lord loue maid maidens Margaret marriage marry Master Maximinus Meg's merchant Merry middle class Mistress Eyre Mistress Farmer Mistress Frank Mistress Winchcomb murder neuer night novelist Old Bosom Peachy Peachy's plot poor quoth shee Randoll Pert reader realism reveals Robin scene servants Shakespeare shoemaker Simon Eyre Sir George song speak story style tells thinks Thomas Cole Thomas Deloney Thomas Nashe Thomas of Reading thou Ursula Viriat wealth weaver wedding widow wife William Winifred wives woman women young