Explorations 3, Band 3Chatto & Windus, 1976 - 196 Seiten |
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Seite 103
... tragedy , which so completely refuses to be nailed down to a moral scheme . Dryden could sum up his All for Love in a couplet , And fame to late posterity shall tell , No lovers lived so great , or died so well ; you cannot treat Antony ...
... tragedy , which so completely refuses to be nailed down to a moral scheme . Dryden could sum up his All for Love in a couplet , And fame to late posterity shall tell , No lovers lived so great , or died so well ; you cannot treat Antony ...
Seite 105
... tragedies —that is , the way in which we describe to ourselves and others the furthest reach of meaning that we have ... tragedy , fully attended to . What happens when we read or watch Hamlet ? We see a young man in a state of intense ...
... tragedies —that is , the way in which we describe to ourselves and others the furthest reach of meaning that we have ... tragedy , fully attended to . What happens when we read or watch Hamlet ? We see a young man in a state of intense ...
Seite 108
... tragedy gives us the courage to face . And this , we remark , is mediated through the ' flawed ' hero himself — a tension that is recog- nized in all theories of tragedy from Aristotle onwards . And finally , of course , even when we ...
... tragedy gives us the courage to face . And this , we remark , is mediated through the ' flawed ' hero himself — a tension that is recog- nized in all theories of tragedy from Aristotle onwards . And finally , of course , even when we ...
Inhalt
Literature and the Teaching of Literature | 9 |
Henry James and Human Liberty | 24 |
Two Notes on Coleridge i Coleridge as Critic | 38 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action Alcibiades Apemantus attitudes Ben Jonson Biographia Literaria Blake Caliban called characters Coleridge Coleridge's connexion consciousness course criticism death define Donne Donne's doth dramatic edition effect embodied energy engaged English essay example experience explicit expression fact feeling Friend give Hamlet hath Henry James Henry VI Herbert's human I. A. Richards I.ii imagination interest IV.i IV.iii John Donne Jonson Jonson's poems kind King Lear literary literature live Lord Macbeth masque meaning mind murder nature novel obvious particular pattern perhaps poet poetic poetry political presented Prospero question reader reference relation rhythm Richard Richard II scene sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shakespeare's thought Shakespearian simply social society song soul speak speech stanza suggestion T. S. Eliot Tempest thee theme things thou Timon of Athens tion tone tragedy truth University verse whole words