Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan and Company, limited, 1922 - 498 Seiten |
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Seite 9
... feeling , that of fear . ) It frightened men and awed them . It made them feel that man is blind and helpless , the plaything of an inscrutable power , called by the name of Fortune or some other name , a power which appears to smile on ...
... feeling , that of fear . ) It frightened men and awed them . It made them feel that man is blind and helpless , the plaything of an inscrutable power , called by the name of Fortune or some other name , a power which appears to smile on ...
Seite 13
... feel in any great strength the half - intellectual , ́ half- nervous excitement of following an ingenious complication . What we do feel strongly , as a tragedy advances to its close , is that the calamities and catastrophe follow ...
... feel in any great strength the half - intellectual , ́ half- nervous excitement of following an ingenious complication . What we do feel strongly , as a tragedy advances to its close , is that the calamities and catastrophe follow ...
Seite 14
... feel that it has removed his capacity or responsibility for dealing with this problem . So far indeed are we from feeling this , that many readers run to the opposite extreme , and openly or privately regard the supernatural as having ...
... feel that it has removed his capacity or responsibility for dealing with this problem . So far indeed are we from feeling this , that many readers run to the opposite extreme , and openly or privately regard the supernatural as having ...
Seite 15
... feel this ; and there are also other dramatic uses to which it may be put . Shake- speare accordingly admits it . On the other hand , any large admission of chance into the tragic sequence would certainly weaken , and might de- stroy ...
... feel this ; and there are also other dramatic uses to which it may be put . Shake- speare accordingly admits it . On the other hand , any large admission of chance into the tragic sequence would certainly weaken , and might de- stroy ...
Seite 22
... feel , and exerts himself to meet , the difficulty that arises from their admission . The difficulty is that the spectator must desire their defeat and even their destruction ; and yet this desire , and the satisfaction of it , are not ...
... feel , and exerts himself to meet , the difficulty that arises from their admission . The difficulty is that the spectator must desire their defeat and even their destruction ; and yet this desire , and the satisfaction of it , are not ...
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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