ShakespeareRoutledge, 2013. okt. 11. - 208 oldal First published in 1951. |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 37 találatból.
... know and has no right reason to trust, . . . falls, in the self-same scene, without proof of the accuser's 0r inquiry and investigation of his own, into a jealous rage, and resolves . . . secretly to kill IO SHAKESPEARE.
... reason to trust than he has to trust the people against whom the insinuations are made: nevertheless, contrary to all real-life probability, the hero becomes immediately jealous—a man pre-eminently free from jealousy becomes on the ...
... reason for Othello to feel inclined to believe Iago; and there are reasons which might well make him feel qualms of doubt concerning Desdemona's fidelity after someone apparently disinterested had suggested the conception of jealousy to ...
... reason to trust. But can we be at all sure of this? On the one hand, Iago has a widespread reputation for integrity; on the other hand, there is more than one reason why Othello could suppose that Desdemona might eventually find him ...
... reason is never in danger of being overthrown by passion. But he himself, out of his own mouth, gives evidence that this is not quite so. In Act II, scene iii, he enters to investigate the fracas involving Cassio and Montano. And at ...
Tartalomjegyzék
7 | |
9 | |
Chapter II Shakespeare and the OrderDisorder Antithesis | 39 |
Chapter III Comedy | 57 |
Chapter IV Imaginative Interpretation and Troilus and Cressida | 89 |
Chapter V History | 115 |
Chapter VI Tragedy | 157 |
Chapter VII The Last Plays | 188 |
Book List | 201 |
Index | 205 |