ShakespeareRoutledge, 2013. okt. 11. - 208 oldal First published in 1951. |
Részletek a könyvből
1 - 5 találat összesen 36 találatból.
... words once more, “the generous and unsuspicious hero, believing a person whom he does not love or really know and has no right reason to trust, . . . falls, in the self-same scene, without proof of the accuser's 0r inquiry and ...
... words might of course sink down into Othello's subconscious mind, to reappear in his conscious mind later on at a critical moment.) I would suggest that, in terms of real life, there is nothing improbable about the following. Othello is ...
... is himself guiding us. By his “blood” Othello means passion. The word “collied'-' means “blackened”. Passion, Othello declares, has blackened his reason, and is trying to get control over his personality. This does not 16 SHAKESPEARE.
... words indicate to us that he is a man in whom, at critical points, passion is liable to try to get the upper hand over reason. Apparently no one in Venice thinks that he is such a man: it is doubtless a case of a noble man with an evil ...
... stand accountant for as great a sin, But partly led to diet my revenge, . . . . (II, i, 300-3 Noting the words “though peradventure . . . a sin” we must take it that Iago is admitting that he loves Desdemona 18 SHAKESPEARE.
Tartalomjegyzék
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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 |