Shakespeare and the Nature of Man: Lowell Lectures, 1942Macmillan Company, 1949 - 233 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 25.
Pàgina ix
... emphasized the wretchedness of the human situ- ation . The contrast between the theoretical good and the evil fact goes very deep into the thought and feeling of Shakespeare's age , and it was expressed by Shakespeare , among others ...
... emphasized the wretchedness of the human situ- ation . The contrast between the theoretical good and the evil fact goes very deep into the thought and feeling of Shakespeare's age , and it was expressed by Shakespeare , among others ...
Pàgina 103
... emphasizes the dramatic conflict . For from whatever side we regard the action there is something politi- cally wrong . From Claudius ' point of view it is bad for the state to have a disaffected heir , particularly since he is so much ...
... emphasizes the dramatic conflict . For from whatever side we regard the action there is something politi- cally wrong . From Claudius ' point of view it is bad for the state to have a disaffected heir , particularly since he is so much ...
Pàgina 146
... emphasized as his relation to the state that should order him politically and the self - control by reason that ... emphasizes the distinction as early in the play as he can , in the conversation between Gloucester and Edmund in the ...
... emphasized as his relation to the state that should order him politically and the self - control by reason that ... emphasizes the distinction as early in the play as he can , in the conversation between Gloucester and Edmund in the ...
Continguts
Hamlet and Troilus and Cressida | 93 |
Othello and King Lear | 122 |
Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra | 153 |
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Shakespeare and the Nature of Man: Lowell Lectures, 1942 Theodore Spencer Visualització de fragments - 1949 |
Frases i termes més freqüents
action Aeschylus angels animals Antony and Cleopatra Apemantus audience beast beginning belief body century chaos character chronicle play conflict convention Coriolanus creatures death described difference between appearance doth dramatic earth elements Elizabethan emphasized everything evil fact fashion Faustus feel final gives God's gods Goneril Gorboduc Hamlet hath heavens Henry hero hierarchy human nature Iago ideal individual intellectual kind King Lear kingship last plays Lear's Leontes lives lust Macbeth Machiavelli macrocosm man's nature merely mind Montaigne morality morality play Nature's Noble Kinsmen Othello passion picture Plutarch prince Prospero re-inforced reality reason relation Renaissance Richard Sabunde says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare situation sixteenth sixteenth-century soul speaks speare's speech spheres stars story Tamburlaine Tempest Thersites things thou thought Timon tion traditional views tragedy tragic trans Troilus and Cressida truth Ulysses universal views of man's violation vision whole Winter's Tale words writers