Shakespeare's Tragic Heroes: Slaves of Passion |
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Page xv
... fortune and of the causes why men fell from weal to woe . The Monk begins : I wol biwaille , in manere of tragedie , The harm of hem that stoode in heigh degree , And fillen so that ther nas no remedie To brynge hem out of hir ...
... fortune and of the causes why men fell from weal to woe . The Monk begins : I wol biwaille , in manere of tragedie , The harm of hem that stoode in heigh degree , And fillen so that ther nas no remedie To brynge hem out of hir ...
Page 15
... fortunes , but the eternal justice involved in the change of fortune constituted the persistent subject of tragedy . Even so had Aristotle's too - often quoted words explained : The change in the hero's fortunes must be ... from ...
... fortunes , but the eternal justice involved in the change of fortune constituted the persistent subject of tragedy . Even so had Aristotle's too - often quoted words explained : The change in the hero's fortunes must be ... from ...
Page 37
... fortune . And even as the idea of the fickle goddess Fortune changed to that of a God just and computative in his justice , so the idea of the fall of princes as depending on variable fortune changed to the idea of sin or folly as the ...
... fortune . And even as the idea of the fickle goddess Fortune changed to that of a God just and computative in his justice , so the idea of the fall of princes as depending on variable fortune changed to the idea of sin or folly as the ...
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Common terms and phrases
action affections ambition anger appearance appetite Aristotle Banquo Blazon of Jealousie blood bloud body brain Cassio cause chapter choler cold complexion Cordelia courage cries death deed Desdemona desire Devil discussion doth English envy evil excess explains fall of princes father fear fortune French Academie fury ghost Gloucester Goneril grief Hamlet hath hear heart Holland's Plutarch humours Iago Ibid imitation judgement justice Kent King King Lear Lady Macbeth Laertes Lavater Lear Lucius Annaeus Seneca lust Macduff madness maner melan melancholy adust mind Mirror for Magistrates moral philosophy mortal sin murder naturall nature Newton Ophelia Othello passion play poetry Polonius punishment rage reason Renaissance revenge says scene Seneca sensible soul Shakespeare shame shew sleep soliloquy sort speak spirits teaching temperance thee theme things thinking Thomas thou thought tragedy translation Treatise unto vengeance vertue vices virtue witches wrath