In Shakespeare's DayJames Vincent Cunningham Fawcett Publications, 1970 - 351 pages |
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Page 323
... ideas will be found to govern most accounts of Shakespeare's tragic view or world . These accounts isolate and exaggerate ... idea is their natural or fitting expres- sion . There can be no doubt that they do arise and that they ought to ...
... ideas will be found to govern most accounts of Shakespeare's tragic view or world . These accounts isolate and exaggerate ... idea is their natural or fitting expres- sion . There can be no doubt that they do arise and that they ought to ...
Page 330
... idea of fate . They would appear as various expressions of the fact that the moral order acts not capriciously or like a human being , but from the necessity of its nature , or , if we prefer the phrase , by general laws , -a necessity ...
... idea of fate . They would appear as various expressions of the fact that the moral order acts not capriciously or like a human being , but from the necessity of its nature , or , if we prefer the phrase , by general laws , -a necessity ...
Page 331
... idea , though very different from the idea of a blank fate , is no solution of the riddle of life is obvious ; but why should we expect it to be such a solution ? Shakespeare was not attempting to justify the ways of God to men , or to ...
... idea , though very different from the idea of a blank fate , is no solution of the riddle of life is obvious ; but why should we expect it to be such a solution ? Shakespeare was not attempting to justify the ways of God to men , or to ...
Contents
Introduction by J V Cunningham page | 11 |
Queen Elizabeth at Greenwich | 17 |
Julius Caesar at the Globe 1599 | 27 |
Copyright | |
27 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
action actors appear audience Ben Jonson Burbage called character comedy comic Cordeilla Court criticism Cymbeline daughter death delight divers doth drama earl effect Elizabethan England English evil excellent fable fault fear feel fortune friends gentlemen Hamlet hath Henry hero honor humorous Iago imitation INGENIOSO J. V. Cunningham jests John John Marston jokes Jonson JUDICIO justice kind King King Lear ladies laugh Lear live London Lord Lord Chamberlain Macbeth Majesty manner matter means mind moral nature never night Othello passions persons pity play players pleasure plot poet poetry present Prince Queen reason Richard Richard III ridiculous Romeo and Juliet scene servants Shakespeare Shakespearean tragedy Simon Forman sort speak speech stage story theater thee thereof things Thomas Thomas Nashe thou thought tion tragic truth unto verse whole William Shakespeare words