Christian Ritual and the World of Shakespeare's TragediesBucknell University Press, 1976 - 441 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 60
Página 54
... falling from God " should employ garden imagery more abundantly than any other , dealing as it does , and as Richard II does , with " a second fall of cursed man " ( III.iv.76 ) . The Homily il- luminates the garden imagery of the play ...
... falling from God " should employ garden imagery more abundantly than any other , dealing as it does , and as Richard II does , with " a second fall of cursed man " ( III.iv.76 ) . The Homily il- luminates the garden imagery of the play ...
Página 138
... falls . His fall results from his inability to retain his highest vision of his ar- tistic creation - another way of saying that he fails to achieve his own potential greatness . He is unable as the play develops to surrender to forces ...
... falls . His fall results from his inability to retain his highest vision of his ar- tistic creation - another way of saying that he fails to achieve his own potential greatness . He is unable as the play develops to surrender to forces ...
Página 191
... fall of a great man , the downfall of a proud pagan , and the destruction of a soul in a Christian world ( with the ... fall - if Othello is guilty of hubris , he must fall . But while he ignores mortality in his metaphoric enthusiasm ...
... fall of a great man , the downfall of a proud pagan , and the destruction of a soul in a Christian world ( with the ... fall - if Othello is guilty of hubris , he must fall . But while he ignores mortality in his metaphoric enthusiasm ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Christian Ritual and the World of Shakespeare's Tragedies Herbert R. Coursen Vista de fragmentos - 1976 |
Términos y frases comunes
action becomes begins blood body Bolingbroke calls Cassio character Christ Christian Claudius Claudius's comedy comes Communion Cordelia course created crime death deeper defined denied Desdemona devil drama earth echo elements Elizabethan emerges England evil expresses fall father fear final fire forces further Ghost give Goneril grace guilt Hamlet hand hath heart heaven Henry hero Homily human Iago Iago's John kill kind King Lear kingdom Lady later Lear's lines live London lord lost Macbeth marriage meaning merely metaphor mind moral move murder nature never night once opening Othello pagan perhaps play play's political positive possibilities potential Prayer predicts Prospero question reality represents response revenge Richard ritual role sacramental says scene seems sense Shakespeare soul speech spirit storm suggests tells Tempest thee things thou tion Tragedy tragic true truth York
Referencias a este libro
Shakespeare's Religious Allusiveness: Its Play and Tolerance Maurice Hunt Sin vista previa disponible - 2004 |