The Shakespearian Scene: Some Twentieth-century PerspectivesLongmans, 1969 - 182 ページ |
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... death . In her speech she shows a depth of sympathy and feeling which is scarcely con- sistent with her character as we already know it . Although there is admittedly some vagueness and incoherence in the general presentation of ...
... death . In her speech she shows a depth of sympathy and feeling which is scarcely con- sistent with her character as we already know it . Although there is admittedly some vagueness and incoherence in the general presentation of ...
100 ページ
... death : ' Why should a dog , a horse , a rat have life and thou no breath at all ? ' King Lear forces us to think ... death of his innocent wife Hermione and of his infant daughter Perdita , both of whom escape . Later when , having ...
... death : ' Why should a dog , a horse , a rat have life and thou no breath at all ? ' King Lear forces us to think ... death of his innocent wife Hermione and of his infant daughter Perdita , both of whom escape . Later when , having ...
108 ページ
... death as ' horrible , cruel , unnecessarily cruel ' , the last grotesque horror of the play : " To be hanged , after the death of her enemies , in the midst of her friends . It is the last hideous joke of destiny : this - and the fact ...
... death as ' horrible , cruel , unnecessarily cruel ' , the last grotesque horror of the play : " To be hanged , after the death of her enemies , in the midst of her friends . It is the last hideous joke of destiny : this - and the fact ...
多く使われている語句
action appear approach argued aspects attention attitude audience behaviour believe Bradley called century character Christian claims Claudius compares complete concerned considerable considered conventions critics deal death described discussion distinct divine drama Duke effect elements Elizabethan evil example expression extreme fact feel figures frequently function give gods Hamlet Heaven historical human ideas imagery images important individual interest interpretation issues justice kind King Lear Knight least light limitations Macbeth major means Measure for Measure method mind moral motives nature Othello particularly patterns play poetic poetry possible presentation problem psychological psychology qualities question readers reading reference regard religious scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare criticism Shakespearian Shakespearian drama significance sources speech spirit suffering suggest symbolic tells themes thought tion tradition tragedy true truth understanding universe various whole Wilson writing