Patterns in Shakespearian TragedyMethuen, 1960 - 205 psl. |
Knygos viduje
Rezultatai 1–3 iš 42
46 psl.
... stands for strength and justice , while Richard stands for the reverse . Shake- speare depends upon his audience's knowledge of the events lead- ing to the murder at Calais of Richard's uncle , Thomas of Wood- stock , Duke of Gloucester ...
... stands for strength and justice , while Richard stands for the reverse . Shake- speare depends upon his audience's knowledge of the events lead- ing to the murder at Calais of Richard's uncle , Thomas of Wood- stock , Duke of Gloucester ...
94 psl.
... stands for jealousy , Desdemona stands for its very 1 See Bernard Spivack , Shakespeare and the Allegory of Evil ( New York , 1958 ) . 2 See Lily B. Campbell , Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes , pp . 148-74 . 1 opposite , the cardinal virtue ...
... stands for jealousy , Desdemona stands for its very 1 See Bernard Spivack , Shakespeare and the Allegory of Evil ( New York , 1958 ) . 2 See Lily B. Campbell , Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes , pp . 148-74 . 1 opposite , the cardinal virtue ...
135 psl.
... stands also between good and evil , but he chooses good not by reason , for he is a fool , but because of the intuitive prompt- ings of his heart . He stands for those forces linking man to God which are a part of man's inherent being ...
... stands also between good and evil , but he chooses good not by reason , for he is a fool , but because of the intuitive prompt- ings of his heart . He stands for those forces linking man to God which are a part of man's inherent being ...
Turinys
Introduction | 1 |
Titus Andronicus Richard III Romeo and Juliet | 14 |
King John Richard II Julius Caesar | 36 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 6
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
accept action affirms Alcibiades Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Athens attain audience Aufidius Banquo beast Bolingbroke Brutus Cassius cause character Christian Claudius Cordelia Coriolanus corruption damnation death delusion deny Desdemona destroy destruction divine Dover Wilson dramatic E. M. W. Tillyard Edgar Elizabethan emphasize England father Faulconbridge feeling final folly fool force of evil ghost Gloucester God's harmonious order Hamlet hath honour human Iago Iago's implicit Julius Caesar justice King John King Lear Laertes Lear's learned lust Macbeth madness man's medieval moral order murder nature Octavius Ophelia Othello passion pattern play Plutarch political pride reason redemption reflects regeneration rejection Renaissance revenge Richard Richard III Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet salvation scene Senecan Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Tragedy sins soul speare speare's speech spite suffering symbol thee thematic theme thou Timon Titus Andronicus tradition tragic hero universe unnatural victory virtue Volumnia Wilson Knight wrong moral choice