Some Shakespearean Themes |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 3 din 74
Pagina 17
Well , we mean to start with what a sharpened common sense , an awareness of motives and of the way things hang together , show them to be . Yet it is still elementary ( though not on that account unnecessary ) to remind ourselves that ...
Well , we mean to start with what a sharpened common sense , an awareness of motives and of the way things hang together , show them to be . Yet it is still elementary ( though not on that account unnecessary ) to remind ourselves that ...
Pagina 72
It is easy enough to see that the ' public ' world evoked by Ulysses is a world of appearance , and to sense its limitations . But what of Troilus and his love ? Professor Wilson Knight says , ' It is the arch - enemy , Time , that ...
It is easy enough to see that the ' public ' world evoked by Ulysses is a world of appearance , and to sense its limitations . But what of Troilus and his love ? Professor Wilson Knight says , ' It is the arch - enemy , Time , that ...
Pagina 121
... human - though there are also potent suggestions of divine grace - that she is ' natural ' in a different sense from that intended in Edmund's philosophy . Her sense of the bounty of nature ( of our sustaining corn ' as well as of ...
... human - though there are also potent suggestions of divine grace - that she is ' natural ' in a different sense from that intended in Edmund's philosophy . Her sense of the bounty of nature ( of our sustaining corn ' as well as of ...
Ce spun oamenii - Scrie o recenzie
Nu am găsit nicio recenzie în locurile obișnuite.
Cuprins
First Observations | 16 |
The Sonnets and King Henry | 35 |
The Theme of Appearance and Reality in Troilus | 55 |
Drept de autor | |
5 alte secțiuni nu sunt arătate
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Some Shakespearean Themes and An Approach to ‘Hamlet’: And An Approach to ... Lionel Charles Knights Previzualizare limitată - 1966 |
Termeni și expresii frecvente
action answer appearance aspects attitudes aware bring CHAPTER character close comes common complex concern consciousness course criticism death defined direction directly doth effect Elizabethan essay essential evil experience expression fact feel final follow Fool force give given Gloucester Hamlet hand hath heart Henry honour human imagery imaginative insistence interest kind King Lear Lear's less lines living look Macbeth madness matter means merely mind moral murder nature particular passage perhaps phrase play poetry political present Professor question reason references relation remarked represent scene seems sense Shakespeare significance simply soliloquy Sonnets speak speech spirit stand suggest taken thee theme things thou thought tion tragedies Troilus true truth values whole