The World & Art of Shakespeare |
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Page 58
... mind / Builds for itself . It might be summed up in the sentence that man was beginning to lose his sense of organic connection with the Universe . Where earlier everything had its fixed place in a hierarchically ordered and fixed ...
... mind / Builds for itself . It might be summed up in the sentence that man was beginning to lose his sense of organic connection with the Universe . Where earlier everything had its fixed place in a hierarchically ordered and fixed ...
Page 203
... mind , And to his honours and his valiant parts Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate . . . ( I , iii , 253 ) while Othello himself reassures the Venetian coucil that he desires Desdemona's presence in Cyprus not To please the palate of ...
... mind , And to his honours and his valiant parts Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate . . . ( I , iii , 253 ) while Othello himself reassures the Venetian coucil that he desires Desdemona's presence in Cyprus not To please the palate of ...
Page 228
... mind to lie In restless ecstasy . Duncan is in his grave ; After life's fitful fever he sleeps well ; Treason has ... mind of the evil - doer . It is particularly significant that the guilt- ridden mind we see revealed in sleeping ...
... mind to lie In restless ecstasy . Duncan is in his grave ; After life's fitful fever he sleeps well ; Treason has ... mind of the evil - doer . It is particularly significant that the guilt- ridden mind we see revealed in sleeping ...
Contents
SHAKESPEARE AND THE DRAMATIC TRADITION | 12 |
THE ELIZABETHAN THEATRE | 25 |
IDOLA THEATRI | 38 |
Copyright | |
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action actors Antony Antony's appear aroused attitude audience awareness Beatrice behaviour Benedick Bolingbroke Brutus Caesar century character Christian Claudius Cleopatra comedy comic contrast conventions Coriolanus corrupt court critics daughter death Desdemona divine doth drama dramatist Duke earlier Elizabethan enemies England English evil fact Falstaff father finally fool friends Ganymede Hamlet hath heaven Henry Henry VI hero heroine honour Iago imagery Juliet Julius Caesar killed King Lear kingship lady Laertes Lord Love's Labour's Lost lovers Macbeth marriage Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice mind mock moral murder nature nobility noble Othello passion patterns plot presented pride Prince Queen rejection revealed revenge Richard Richard II romantic Romeo Romeo and Juliet Rosalind royal scene sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shylock speech stage stresses symbolic theatre thee theme thou throne tragedy tragic Troilus and Cressida true villain virtue wife words
References to this book
A New Variorum Edition of Shakespeare: King Henry IV, part 2. 1940 William Shakespeare No preview available - 1977 |