Shakespearean Tragedy: Lectures on Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, MacbethMacmillan and Company, limited, 1924 - 498 Seiten |
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Seite 24
... less into their interpretation of every author who is ' sympathetic ' to them . And even where neither of these causes of error appears to operate , another is present from which it is probably impossible wholly to escape . What I mean ...
... less into their interpretation of every author who is ' sympathetic ' to them . And even where neither of these causes of error appears to operate , another is present from which it is probably impossible wholly to escape . What I mean ...
Seite 28
... less his adversary's remorse , bring about the opposite of what they sought . Lear follows an old man's whim , half generous , half selfish ; and in a moment it looses all the powers of darkness upon him . Othello agonises over an empty ...
... less his adversary's remorse , bring about the opposite of what they sought . Lear follows an old man's whim , half generous , half selfish ; and in a moment it looses all the powers of darkness upon him . Othello agonises over an empty ...
Seite 31
... less degree , wrong or bad . The catastrophe is , in the main , the return of this action on the head of the agent . It is an example of justice ; and that order which , present alike within the agents and outside them , infallibly ...
... less degree , wrong or bad . The catastrophe is , in the main , the return of this action on the head of the agent . It is an example of justice ; and that order which , present alike within the agents and outside them , infallibly ...
Seite 36
... less distinct perception that the tragic suffering and death arise from collision , not with a fate or blank power , but with a moral power , a power akin to all that we admire and revere in the characters themselves . This per- ception ...
... less distinct perception that the tragic suffering and death arise from collision , not with a fate or blank power , but with a moral power , a power akin to all that we admire and revere in the characters themselves . This per- ception ...
Seite 38
... less good . That this idea , though very different from the idea of a blank fate , is no solution of the riddle of life is obvious ; but why should we expect it to be such a solution ? Shakespeare was not attempting to justify the ways ...
... less good . That this idea , though very different from the idea of a blank fate , is no solution of the riddle of life is obvious ; but why should we expect it to be such a solution ? Shakespeare was not attempting to justify the ways ...
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