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...marionettes, and the perfect equality and fraternity that prevail in the box symbolize the artificiality of social distinctions. This point is obscured, however, by the simile "like slaughtered sheep"; nor is it, strictly speaking, the "show" that brings beggars "astraddle of the guys what's got the dough." I question also whether the dialect is used quite consistently throughout. In any case, it seems regrettable that the phrase "bunched up" should occur twice in fourteen lines. E.E. Hunt's sonnet, "Cloud-land," is compact and musical, and induces in the reader a mood as sympathetic as the writer's with...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Howard's Review of Monthly | 11/29/1907 | See Source »

Shakespeare can not be said to have originated the historical drama; in fact he was hardly an originator in any direction. It was rather his strong point to develope what he found: into the dough which others made he put the yeast which caused it to rise. In this way he took the old Chronicles which existed before his time, and by varying adherence to them and departure from them developed his famous plays. He adhered to the Chronicles in so far as there is a stratum of historical fact in all of the dramas of which we are speaking...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Copeland's Lecture. | 1/30/1894 | See Source »

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