Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose |
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Página vii
... and , though he did not proceed to college nor as far as we know ever leave the kingdom , sections on the university and travel have been added to complete the picture of an average Elizabethan gentleman's education .
... and , though he did not proceed to college nor as far as we know ever leave the kingdom , sections on the university and travel have been added to complete the picture of an average Elizabethan gentleman's education .
Página xi
My thanks are due to the following gentlemen for kind permission to use their text or illustrations ; to my friend Mr R. B. McKerrow for the extracts taken from his edition of Nashe , to Dr W. W. Greg for the contract on p .
My thanks are due to the following gentlemen for kind permission to use their text or illustrations ; to my friend Mr R. B. McKerrow for the extracts taken from his edition of Nashe , to Dr W. W. Greg for the contract on p .
Página xii
THE COUNTRYSIDE § I. • ( Midsummer Night's Dream , Induction to the Taming of the Shrew , As You Like It , Winter's Tale ) COUNTRY - FOLK A country gentleman , a franklin , a farmer , a milk- maid , a shepherd § 2.
THE COUNTRYSIDE § I. • ( Midsummer Night's Dream , Induction to the Taming of the Shrew , As You Like It , Winter's Tale ) COUNTRY - FOLK A country gentleman , a franklin , a farmer , a milk- maid , a shepherd § 2.
Página xiii
THE UNIVERSITY The universities of England , the life at Oxford , a young gentleman of the university , a mere scholar § 4. TRAVEL . The use and abuse of travel , the Italianate English- man Part II . Shakespeare in London 1586-1608 ...
THE UNIVERSITY The universities of England , the life at Oxford , a young gentleman of the university , a mere scholar § 4. TRAVEL . The use and abuse of travel , the Italianate English- man Part II . Shakespeare in London 1586-1608 ...
Página 2
The English are so naturally inclined to pleasure , as there is no country wherein the gentlemen and lords have so many and large parks only reserved for the pleasure of hunting , or where all sorts of men allot so much ground about ...
The English are so naturally inclined to pleasure , as there is no country wherein the gentlemen and lords have so many and large parks only reserved for the pleasure of hunting , or where all sorts of men allot so much ground about ...
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Life in Shakespeare's England: A Book of Elizabethan Prose John Dover Wilson Vista previa limitada - 1913 |
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