Abstract:
The New York Times: Shakespeare Tercentenary: 1616-1916 -- Shakespeare's Heroines As Human Beings: Others Gave Only Femininity to Their Women Characters -- The Heroines As Viewed From the Stage: On Every Fresh Perusal of the Plays the Actor Finds New Facets -- French Criticisms of Shakespeare's Taste -- And Seen As Modern Types, People of Today: Lady Macbeth a Politician's Wife, Rosalind the Alert, Up-to-Date Girl -- The Spirit of Shakespeare -- The Discoverer of the Female Character: Shakespeare First, Says De Quincey, to See and Bring Out Its Beauty -- Viola's Delicacy Set off From Rosalind's Frolic Humor: Her Femininity "Is Forever Breaking Through Her Masquerade" -- Goethe on the Plan of "Hamlet" -- To Shakespeare.
Description:
Digitized from original print, Valdosta State University Archives and Special Collections, October 5, 2016. Additional information, along with text of document, found with the Library of Congress. Link to the March 05, 1916: https://www.loc.gov/item/sn78004456/1916-03-05/ed-1/