Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan, 1926 - 498 Seiten |
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Seite 7
... play , unless the members of the Chorus are reckoned among them ) ; but it is pre - eminently the story of one person , the ' hero , or at most of two , the ' hero ' and ' heroine . ' Moreover , it is only in the love - tragedies ...
... play , unless the members of the Chorus are reckoned among them ) ; but it is pre - eminently the story of one person , the ' hero , or at most of two , the ' hero ' and ' heroine . ' Moreover , it is only in the love - tragedies ...
Seite 33
... play , we slip , by our own fault or the dramatist's , from the tragic position , or when , in thinking about the play afterwards , we fall back on our everyday legal and moral notions . But tragedy does not belong , any more than ...
... play , we slip , by our own fault or the dramatist's , from the tragic position , or when , in thinking about the play afterwards , we fall back on our everyday legal and moral notions . But tragedy does not belong , any more than ...
Seite 42
... play , though the conflict has not arisen , things are happening and being done which in degree arrest , startle ... play forms one of a series , some knowledge may be assumed . So in Richard III . Even in Richard II . not a little ...
... play , though the conflict has not arisen , things are happening and being done which in degree arrest , startle ... play forms one of a series , some knowledge may be assumed . So in Richard III . Even in Richard II . not a little ...
Seite 43
... play . This is one of several reasons why many people enjoy reading him , who , on the whole , dislike reading plays . A main cause of this very general dislike is that the reader has not a lively enough imagina- tion to carry him with ...
... play . This is one of several reasons why many people enjoy reading him , who , on the whole , dislike reading plays . A main cause of this very general dislike is that the reader has not a lively enough imagina- tion to carry him with ...
Seite 44
... play opens with a quiet con- versation , this is usually brief , and then at once the hero enters and takes action ... play ? Or , if this seems too presumptuous a question , let us put it in the form , What is the effect of his opening ...
... play opens with a quiet con- versation , this is usually brief , and then at once the hero enters and takes action ... play ? Or , if this seems too presumptuous a question , let us put it in the form , What is the effect of his opening ...
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action Albany answer Antony and Cleopatra appears Banquo believe blood Cassio catastrophe cause certainly character conflict Cordelia Coriolanus Cymbeline death deed Desdemona doubt drama Duncan Edgar Edmund effect Emilia evil fact fate father fear feel follows fool force Ghost Gloster Goneril Hamlet heart hero Horatio horror husband Iago Iago's idea imagination impression Julius Caesar Kent King Lear Lady Macbeth Laertes lago Lear's less lines Macduff madness means melancholy merely mind moral murder nature never once Ophelia Othello pain passage passion perhaps persons pity play plot Polonius probably question reader reason refer Regan regard Richard III Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy soliloquy soul speak speech suppose surely thee things thou thought Timon tion tragedy tragic Troilus and Cressida truth whole wife Witches words