Shakespeare: the Early WritingsBowes and Bowes, 1972 - 264 páginas |
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Página 232
... Moral issues all but spell themselves out as two persons confront each other . The concentration of meaning is so obvious that it would be difficult if not impossible to subordinate the moral to the mere represen- tation . It is the ...
... Moral issues all but spell themselves out as two persons confront each other . The concentration of meaning is so obvious that it would be difficult if not impossible to subordinate the moral to the mere represen- tation . It is the ...
Página 233
... moral choice is to be made , and morality rather than tragedy is the subject . The poems are designed to interest us in moral questions , to inform us of the consequences whatever the choice finally made , to acquaint us with the ...
... moral choice is to be made , and morality rather than tragedy is the subject . The poems are designed to interest us in moral questions , to inform us of the consequences whatever the choice finally made , to acquaint us with the ...
Página 241
... moral of it all is sapped . ( Lucrece , 341-2 ) But whatever Shakespeare's intent in all this , he is certainly exploiting artifice upon artifice , as we see him also doing in Titus Andronicus , and as he does not in the comedies even ...
... moral of it all is sapped . ( Lucrece , 341-2 ) But whatever Shakespeare's intent in all this , he is certainly exploiting artifice upon artifice , as we see him also doing in Titus Andronicus , and as he does not in the comedies even ...
Índice
Italian Contributions | 44 |
Loves Labours Lost | 62 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona | 104 |
Direitos de autor | |
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Palavras e frases frequentes
action Alcmena Amphitryon ancient Antipholus appears argument Ariosto audience beauty become beginning Berowne Boccaccio bring Bruno character charm Christian Comedy of Errors comes complex conception confusion constancy contrast course death developed Diana discover divine drama effect English essence faith father feeling Gentlemen of Verona Gloucester happiness hath Henry honour human idea imagination interest intrigue Italian J. V. Cunningham Julia King ladies language light live Love's Labour's Lost lovers Lucrece Lyly manner Margaret matter means Menaechmi mind mockery mocking Molière moral nature Neo-Platonism Neo-Platonists never oaths passion pattern perfection persons Petrarch Petrarchan philosophy Platonic Plautus play plot Plotinus poems poetry Proteus reason representation Richard romantic scene sense servant Shakespeare Silvia song soul speak spirit substance Suffolk suppose things thou thought tion Titus Andronicus Valentine Venus and Adonis wife wonder words writing young
Referências a este livro
Shakespeare's Religious Allusiveness: Its Play and Tolerance Maurice Hunt Pré-visualização indisponível - 2004 |