Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 2Laurie Lanzen Harris Gale Research Company, 1984 - 591 Seiten This volume includes plot summaries, character profiles, criticism of the works and sources for further study. |
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Seite 121
... passion , excitement of passion may stimulate its display ; and it is remarkable that so long as Lear retains the least control over his passion , his imagination remains comparatively dull , his eloquence tame . It is only when ...
... passion , excitement of passion may stimulate its display ; and it is remarkable that so long as Lear retains the least control over his passion , his imagination remains comparatively dull , his eloquence tame . It is only when ...
Seite 190
... passion . Thereafter he shows his abhorrence of passion by the violence of his anathemas against lust , one of the impulses which most surely degrades man because it most completely submerges reason . On his pilgrimage he is accompanied ...
... passion . Thereafter he shows his abhorrence of passion by the violence of his anathemas against lust , one of the impulses which most surely degrades man because it most completely submerges reason . On his pilgrimage he is accompanied ...
Seite 209
... passion of a Lear . Is it not , then , as impossible to suppose that the error was childish , foolish , or knavish , which was , in an important way , the cause of such a passion ? It is true that the action which precipitated Lear's ...
... passion of a Lear . Is it not , then , as impossible to suppose that the error was childish , foolish , or knavish , which was , in an important way , the cause of such a passion ? It is true that the action which precipitated Lear's ...
Inhalt
Preface | 7 |
King Lear | 87 |
Loves Labours Lost | 296 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. C. Bradley action Albany Algernon Charles Swinburne Armado audience August Wilhelm Schlegel becomes Berowne blind Bradley Buckingham characters Christian comedy comic Cordelia Costard Cranmer critics Cymbeline daughters death drama Edgar Edmund effect Elizabethan essay date evil fact fall father feeling final Fletcher following excerpt folly Fool Gloucester Gloucester's Goneril Goneril and Regan Hamlet heart Henry VIII Henry's Hermann Ulrici Holofernes human imagery imagination interpretation justice Katherine Kent King Lear King's L. C. Knights ladies language Lear's Love's Labour's Lost madness meaning mind moral nature Navarre never Othello passion play's plot poet poetic political present Princess Queen R. W. Chambers reality reason Robert Ornstein romances scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shakspere speak speare speare's speech stage suffering suggest symbol theme things tragedy tragic true truth Ulrici vision whole Wilson Knight Wolsey Wolsey's words