Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan and Company, Limited, 1926 - 498 Seiten |
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Seite 2
... believe . They would not shrink if they remembered two things . In the first place , in this process of comparison and analysis , it is not requisite , it is on the contrary ruinous , to set imagination aside and to substitute some ...
... believe . They would not shrink if they remembered two things . In the first place , in this process of comparison and analysis , it is not requisite , it is on the contrary ruinous , to set imagination aside and to substitute some ...
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... believe most readers would have to search pain- fully for instances . It is , further , frequently easy to see the dramatic intention of an accident ; and some things which look like accidents have really a connection with character ...
... believe most readers would have to search pain- fully for instances . It is , further , frequently easy to see the dramatic intention of an accident ; and some things which look like accidents have really a connection with character ...
Seite 21
... believe that by an unjust accusation he had caused her death , he would never have lived on , like Leontes . In the same way the villain Iachimo has no touch of tragic greatness . But Iago comes nearer to it , and if Iago had slandered ...
... believe that by an unjust accusation he had caused her death , he would never have lived on , like Leontes . In the same way the villain Iachimo has no touch of tragic greatness . But Iago comes nearer to it , and if Iago had slandered ...
Seite 26
... believe , by any reader who is in touch with Shakespeare's mind and can observe his own . Indeed such a reader is rather likely to complain that they are painfully obvious . But if they are true as well as obvious , something follows ...
... believe , by any reader who is in touch with Shakespeare's mind and can observe his own . Indeed such a reader is rather likely to complain that they are painfully obvious . But if they are true as well as obvious , something follows ...
Seite 29
... believe , are the facts ever so presented that it seems to us as if the supreme power , whatever it may be , had a special spite against a family or an individual . Neither , lastly , do we receive the impression ( which , it must be ...
... believe , are the facts ever so presented that it seems to us as if the supreme power , whatever it may be , had a special spite against a family or an individual . Neither , lastly , do we receive the impression ( which , it must be ...
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action answer Antony and Cleopatra appears Banquo believe Cassio catastrophe cause certainly character conflict conscience Cordelia Coriolanus critics Cymbeline death deed Desdemona doubt drama Edgar Edmund effect Emilia evil exciting fact fate father fear feel follows force Ghost Gloster Goneril Hamlet heart hero Horatio horror husband Iago Iago's idea imagination impression Juliet Julius Caesar Kent King Lear Lady Macbeth Laertes lago Lear's less lines Macduff madness means melancholy merely mind moral murder nature never observe once Ophelia Othello pain passage passion perhaps persons pity play play-scene plot Polonius probably question reader reason Regan regard Richard III Roderigo Romeo Romeo and Juliet scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy shows soliloquy soul speak speech story suffering suppose surely theory things thou thought Timon tion Titus Andronicus tragedy tragic truth whole Witches words