The Mortal Worm: Shakespeare's Master ThemeAssociated Faculty Press, Incorporated, 1977 - 119 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 34
Página 33
... clear that Troilus ' longing is grossly and un- equivocally sensual . But it is also clear that he does not know the nature of passion . It is therefore inaccurate to call him " an expert in sensuality " or a " sexual gourmet . " And it ...
... clear that Troilus ' longing is grossly and un- equivocally sensual . But it is also clear that he does not know the nature of passion . It is therefore inaccurate to call him " an expert in sensuality " or a " sexual gourmet . " And it ...
Página 41
... clear his view of the play's nature . In some ways my view comes close to his . But he insists that " the old interpretation of the play as an outburst of unrestrained bitterness against life , to be overcome later , is fantastically ...
... clear his view of the play's nature . In some ways my view comes close to his . But he insists that " the old interpretation of the play as an outburst of unrestrained bitterness against life , to be overcome later , is fantastically ...
Página 44
... clear that Shakespeare has solved the problem ; it is clear , at any rate , once we discern the two kinds of action in the play . Shakespeare has , for one thing , given extraordinary care to the delineation of Iago's character and to ...
... clear that Shakespeare has solved the problem ; it is clear , at any rate , once we discern the two kinds of action in the play . Shakespeare has , for one thing , given extraordinary care to the delineation of Iago's character and to ...
Contenido
Seeds | 3 |
Julius Caesar | 14 |
Troilus and Cressida | 28 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 9 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
absurd action and meaning Agamemnon Antony and Cleopatra Antony's aware beauty believe beloved betray Bolingbroke Brutus Cassius cause constancy conveys Cordelia course Dark Woman death Desdemona dramatic egotism emphatically Enobarbus equivocal eternal expressed eyes Fair Youth series Falstaff feeling Florizel flowers fool forever Freud gives Hamlet hath heart Hector Helen Hermione Hobbesian honor Hookerian human love Iago Iago's immortality intuition irony Julius Caesar kind King Lear Lear's Leontes lovers lust mortal motive nature never noble once Othello Pandarus passage passion Perdita Phoenix play play's poem poet poet's political Polixenes precisely rational reason replies revulsion Richard Richard II satirical says scene seems sense sexual Shakespeare Sonnets sort soul speak speech status tells thee thematic theme Thersites thing thou threnos time's tone tragic transcendent Troilus and Cressida true love truth Turtle Ulysses vision Wilson Knight Winter's Tale