Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan, 1985 - 432 Seiten Nearly half a million copies in print. A.C.Bradley's Shakespearean Tragedy, first published in 1904, ranks as one of the greatest works of Shakespearean criticism of all time. In his ten lectures A.C.Bradley has provided a study of the four great tragedies - Hamlet, Othello, King Lear and Macbeth - which reveals a deep understanding of Shakepearean thought and art. John Russell Brown, a distinguished Shakespearean scholar, has written an entirely new introduction for this third edition which considers the enormous contribution of Bradley's work to twentieth-century Shakespeare criticism. |
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Seite 242
... passage of poetry , one of the qualities we have in mind when we distinguish poetry as ' romantic ' . Nothing like Ham- let's mysterious sigh " The rest is silence ' , nothing like Othello's memories of his life of marvel and ...
... passage of poetry , one of the qualities we have in mind when we distinguish poetry as ' romantic ' . Nothing like Ham- let's mysterious sigh " The rest is silence ' , nothing like Othello's memories of his life of marvel and ...
Seite 334
... passage in Antony and Cleopatra is much nearer to the passage in Macbeth , and seems to have been forgotten by those who say that there is nothing in Shakespeare resembling that passage.1 The old Country- man comes at a moment of tragic ...
... passage in Antony and Cleopatra is much nearer to the passage in Macbeth , and seems to have been forgotten by those who say that there is nothing in Shakespeare resembling that passage.1 The old Country- man comes at a moment of tragic ...
Seite 353
... passage beginning , ' But as we often see . ' To the second belongs the description of Pyrrhus , covered with blood that was Baked and impasted with the parching streets , That lend a tyrannous and damned light To their lord's murder ...
... passage beginning , ' But as we often see . ' To the second belongs the description of Pyrrhus , covered with blood that was Baked and impasted with the parching streets , That lend a tyrannous and damned light To their lord's murder ...
Inhalt
LECTURE II | 29 |
LECTURE III | 61 |
LECTURE IV | 102 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action answer Antony and Cleopatra appears Banquo believe blood Bradley Cassio catastrophe cause certainly character conflict conscious Cordelia Coriolanus critics Cymbeline death deed Desdemona doubt dramatic Duncan Edgar Edmund effect Emilia evil fact fate father fear feel follows Fool force Ghost Gloster Goneril Hamlet heart heaven hero Horatio horror human husband Iago Iago's idea imagination impression insanity Julius Caesar Kent King Lear Lady Macbeth Laertes Lear's less lines Macduff madness means melancholy merely mind moral murder nature never once Ophelia Othello pain passage passion perhaps persons pity play play-scene plot Polonius probably question reader reason refer Regan regard Richard III Romeo scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy soliloquy soul speak speech story suffering suppose surely thee things thou thought Timon tragic Troilus and Cressida truth whole Witches words