Search e-Library




Filtered by: Show All

Kyd : Thomas Kyd/ Kid, (1558-94), English dramatist, exponent of ‘tragedy of blood’.

6 result/s found for Kyd

... editor Ramananda Chatterji, and the Sanskritist Gispati Kavyatirtha. 1 G. C. Denham was then Special Assistant to the Deputy Inspector-General of Police, Bengal. Here is his address: 7, Kyd Street, Calcutta. Page 58 The Bengal Government was now desperate, as was the British-Indian government. They had to do something. They had to show that they were capable of taking ...

... the case with all poets who represent their age in some or most of its phases and with those who do not do this, the milieu is of very small importance. We know from literary history that Marlowe and Kyd and other writers exercised no little influence on Shakespeare in his young and callow days; and it may be said in passing that all poets of the first order & even many of the second are profoundly ... as part of the knowledge of intellectual origins this is a highly important and noteworthy fact. But in the task of criticism what do we gain by it? We have simply brought the phantoms of Marlowe & Kyd between ourselves and what we are assimilating and so disturbed & blurred the true picture of it that was falling on our souls; and if we know our business, the first thing we shall do is to banish those ...

[exact]

... the opening words, by the slowing down of the pace at the close, with two stressed syllables which disturb the iambic rhythm: Page 67 Let me not die in languor and long tears. Kyd has on rare occasions an emotionally dramatic as well as illuminating generality: Oh eyes, no eyes, but fountains fraught with tears; Oh life, no life, but lively form of death, Oh world ...

[exact]

... to self-sight within this individual instrument of intense passion and curious imagination. But to compare Tennyson's revival with Sri Aurobindo's and, much more, to compare the practice of Marlowe, Kyd and the young Shakespeare with it is to overlook the very heart of the Aurobindonian art: "an attempt to catch something of the Upanishadic and Kalida-sian movement, so far as that is a possibility in ...

[exact]

... self-sight within this individual instrument of intense passion and curious imagination. But to compare Tennyson's revival with Sri Aurobindo's and, much more, to compare the practice of Marlowe, Kyd and the young Shakespeare with it is to overlook the very heart of the Aurobindonian art: "an attempt to catch something of the Upanishadic and Kalidasian Page 216 movement, so far ...

[exact]

... Kavi 163 Kazantzakis, Nicos 60,213 Keats 18,197,336 knowledge Agni and 306 lustrous lid and 36,37,311 Savitri full of 208 Transcendent 248 Kundalirti 116 Kyd 216 L Lal, P. 125 Landor 166 laya 254 Lewis, C. Day 258 life force. See also vital all-effecting 273 horses 114,302 in Savitri 285 Page ...

[exact]