Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan, 1967 - 498 Seiten 1908. From the Introduction: In these lectures I propose to consider the four principal tragedies of Shakespeare from a single point of view. Nothing will be said of Shakespeare's place in the history of either English literature or of the drama in general. No attempt will be made to compare him with other writers. I shall leave untouched, or merely glanced at, questions regarding his life and character, the development of his genius and art, the genuineness, sources, texts, interrelations of his various works. Even what may be called, in a restricted sense, the poetry of the four tragedies-the beauties of style, diction, versification-I shall pass by in silence. Our one object will be what, again in a restricted sense, may be called dramatic appreciation; to increase our understanding and enjoyment of these works as dramas; to learn to apprehend the action and some of the personages of each with a somewhat greater truth and intensity, so that they may assume in our imaginations a shape a little less unlike the shape they wore in the imagination of their creator. |
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Seite 162
... father was in Shakespeare's day higher than in ours . ' But she does more than obey , ' we are told ; ' she runs off frightened to report to her father Hamlet's strange visit and behaviour ; she shows to her father one of Hamlet's ...
... father was in Shakespeare's day higher than in ours . ' But she does more than obey , ' we are told ; ' she runs off frightened to report to her father Hamlet's strange visit and behaviour ; she shows to her father one of Hamlet's ...
Seite 163
... father . To whom else should she go ? Her brother is away . Her father , whom she saw with her own eyes and not with Shakespeare's , is kind , and the wisest of men , and concerned about Hamlet's state . Her father finds , in her report ...
... father . To whom else should she go ? Her brother is away . Her father , whom she saw with her own eyes and not with Shakespeare's , is kind , and the wisest of men , and concerned about Hamlet's state . Her father finds , in her report ...
Seite 321
... father . And even if truth were the one and only obligation , to tell much less than truth is not to tell it . And Cordelia's speech not only tells much less than truth about her love , it actually perverts the truth when it implies ...
... father . And even if truth were the one and only obligation , to tell much less than truth is not to tell it . And Cordelia's speech not only tells much less than truth about her love , it actually perverts the truth when it implies ...
Inhalt
LECTURE I | 5 |
LECTURE II | 40 |
LECTURE III | 79 |
Urheberrecht | |
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