Some Shakespearean Themes |
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Pagina 105
3 2 the world as Lear and which has proved so woefully inadequate under stress , he is free to express attitudes ... What constitutes the torture - Lear's ' wheel of fire ' --is that each successive attitude , bearing the stamp of its ...
3 2 the world as Lear and which has proved so woefully inadequate under stress , he is free to express attitudes ... What constitutes the torture - Lear's ' wheel of fire ' --is that each successive attitude , bearing the stamp of its ...
Pagina 113
This indeed is slippery ground for interpretation , but it is at least relevant to recall that in other plays of roughly the same period - notably perhaps in Timon of Athens , so close to Lear in its probing of certain moods of ...
This indeed is slippery ground for interpretation , but it is at least relevant to recall that in other plays of roughly the same period - notably perhaps in Timon of Athens , so close to Lear in its probing of certain moods of ...
Pagina 174
Certainly King Lear is not a play without moral presuppositions , but although these presuppositions are finally reaffirmed ... The nature of Lear's madness is often misunderstood , as when , for example , Dr Leslie Hotson , in an ...
Certainly King Lear is not a play without moral presuppositions , but although these presuppositions are finally reaffirmed ... The nature of Lear's madness is often misunderstood , as when , for example , Dr Leslie Hotson , in an ...
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Cuprins
Foreword | 9 |
First Observations | 26 |
The Sonnets and King Henry IV | 45 |
Drept de autor | |
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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 aware brings CHAPTER character close comes complex concerned consciousness Cordelia course criticism death defined direction directly doth effect element Elizabethan essay essential evil experience expression fact feel follow Fool force give given Gloucester hath heart Henry honour human imagery images imaginative interest John kind King Lear Lear's less lies lines living look Macbeth man's matter meaning merely mind moral murder nature particular passage pattern peace play poet poetry political possible present question reality reason references relation represent revealed scene seems seen sense Shakespeare shows significance simply Sonnets speak speech stand suggests thee themes things thou thought tion tragedies Troilus true truth Ulysses values whole