The Good that Lives After Them: A Pattern in Shakespeare's TragediesC. Winter, 1995 - 247 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 34
Página 6
... explain how Richard comes to possess it , much less how it should be transferred from him to others . There is ... explain why their protagonists seem to have so much in common with Richard . Of course , its presence in these plays can ...
... explain how Richard comes to possess it , much less how it should be transferred from him to others . There is ... explain why their protagonists seem to have so much in common with Richard . Of course , its presence in these plays can ...
Página 159
... explains all these things . Certainly , they cannot all be explained simply by attributing to Macbeth a great deal of ambition . I would explain them as follows . Macbeth has no single , stable way of life.36 He does not because he ...
... explains all these things . Certainly , they cannot all be explained simply by attributing to Macbeth a great deal of ambition . I would explain them as follows . Macbeth has no single , stable way of life.36 He does not because he ...
Página 186
... explanation for his parricidal and homicidal tendencies . Macbeth , on the other hand , though he kills many people ... explain the pointless butchery in which he indulges after the regicide , but they are not the reason he commits ...
... explanation for his parricidal and homicidal tendencies . Macbeth , on the other hand , though he kills many people ... explain the pointless butchery in which he indulges after the regicide , but they are not the reason he commits ...
Índice
Hamlets Other Purpose | 12 |
King Lear and Macbeth the First Love Test | 39 |
King Lear and Macbeth the Second Love Test | 100 |
Página de créditos | |
Otras 2 secciones no se muestran.
Términos y frases comunes
abdication actions ambitious androgyny Antony and Cleopatra apparitions asserts attribute audience Banquo's ghost behavior bond character Christian cited compositional pattern contrast Cordelia courage course crimes criticize dagger daughter death desire deuteragonist discussion divine grace dramatic ennui ethical evidence evil explicitly express fact father fear Gentleman Goneril and Regan grace grief Hamlet Hecuba implies interpretation Kent kill Duncan kind of manliness King Lear kingship Lady Macbeth Laertes later Lear and Macbeth Lear's least lines love test Macduff meaninglessness means merely moral murder nature never nothingness Ophelia Othello pangs of conscience passage perhaps person phrase play play's Polonius possess primary motives protagonist purpose reaction reason reference regicide relationship religious revenge Richard III Romeo and Juliet Rosenberg sacrifice says scene secondary motives seems sense Shakespeare significance sisters Siward soliloquy someone speaks speech suggests suicide things thou tragedy tragic victims virtue wants wife witches words