Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters volume I 8 7

Cover Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters volume I 8 7
Shakespeare His Life Art And Characters volume I 8 7
H N Hudson
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And on the same principleher occasional freedoms of speech serve to deepen our sense of herinnate delicacy; they being manifestly intended as a part of herdisguise, and springing from the feeling that it is far lessindelicate to go a little out of her character, in order to preventany suspicion of her sex, than it would be to hazard such a suspicionby keeping strictly within her character. In other words, her freetalk bears much the same relation to her character as her dress doesto her person,... and is therefore becoming to her even on the score offeminine modesty. --Celia appears well worthy of a place beside herwhose love she shares and repays. Instinct with the soul of moralbeauty and female tenderness, the friendship of these more-than-sisters"mounts to the seat of grace within the mind. " "We still have slept together; Rose at an instant, learn'd, play'd, eat together; And wheresoe'er we went, like Juno's swans, Still we went coupled and inseparable. " The general drift and temper, or, as some of the German critics wouldsay, the ground-idea of this play, is aptly hinted by the title.

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