Shakespeare's TragediesRoutledge and Paul, 1951 - 277 pagina's |
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Pagina 20
... deep tragedy , because the event which it dramatizes is not in itself deeply tragic . A chief reason why there are so few deep tragedies is that in life and in art there are so few stories which are themselves deeply tragic . In the ...
... deep tragedy , because the event which it dramatizes is not in itself deeply tragic . A chief reason why there are so few deep tragedies is that in life and in art there are so few stories which are themselves deeply tragic . In the ...
Pagina 21
... deep tragedy are something different from domestic or personal sorrow , for in deep tragedy everything irrelevant is cut out and the essentials are concentrated . The story of Oedipus , however told , is terrible and most moving . In ...
... deep tragedy are something different from domestic or personal sorrow , for in deep tragedy everything irrelevant is cut out and the essentials are concentrated . The story of Oedipus , however told , is terrible and most moving . In ...
Pagina 271
... deep tragedy ' for those plays which , when adequately acted before a suitable audience , can produce a complete cleansing of the emotions . Further , that although this purging can only be completely effected in the theatre , the ...
... deep tragedy ' for those plays which , when adequately acted before a suitable audience , can produce a complete cleansing of the emotions . Further , that although this purging can only be completely effected in the theatre , the ...
Inhoudsopgave
SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY | 9 |
TITUS ANDRONICUS | 30 |
ROMEO AND JULIET | 47 |
11 andere gedeelten niet getoond
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Aaron Achilles Ajax Alcibiades Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Apemantus audience Aufidius Bassianus begins blood Brabantio Brutus Cassio character Claudius comes Cordelia Coriolanus critics curtains dead death deep tragedy Desdemona drama Edmund Elizabethan Emilia emotions Enobarbus enters episode eyes father feeling follows Friar friends give Gloucester Goneril Greek Hamlet hand hath heart Hector honour husband Iago Iago's inner stage Julius Caesar kill King Lady Capulet Laertes Lavinia Lear Lord Lucius Macbeth main stage Martius Menenius mind moral mother murder nature never night Octavius Othello Pandarus passes Patroclus Plutarch Queen realize Regan replies returns revenge Revenge Play Roderigo Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet Saturninus scene sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays soldier soliloquy Spanish Tragedy speak speech stage direction story Tamora thee Thersites thou Timon Titus Andronicus tragic tribunes Troylus and Cressida Tybalt Ulysses upper stage utter vengeance Volumnia wife words young