Shakespeare-characters; Chiefly Those SubordinateSmith, Elder & Company, 1863 - 521 páginas |
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Página 115
... Desdemona ; or ( which is the most probable ) that the poet intended to show the towering intellect of Iago , in the pas- siveness of Othello to an act repugnant to his own open and direct character ; for it is Iago who induces him to ...
... Desdemona ; or ( which is the most probable ) that the poet intended to show the towering intellect of Iago , in the pas- siveness of Othello to an act repugnant to his own open and direct character ; for it is Iago who induces him to ...
Página 116
... Desdemona : — " She lov'd me for the dangers I had pass'd , And I lov'd her that she did pity them . ( This only is the witchcraft ' I have us'd . " Subsequently , however , when the handkerchief is missing , we find that a vital ...
... Desdemona : — " She lov'd me for the dangers I had pass'd , And I lov'd her that she did pity them . ( This only is the witchcraft ' I have us'd . " Subsequently , however , when the handkerchief is missing , we find that a vital ...
Página 118
... Desdemona was " transported " from her home , " with no worse nor better guard , But with a knave of common hire , a gondolier . " Which is as if he had apprised a man like Lord Grey or the Marquis of Westminster , that his daughter had ...
... Desdemona was " transported " from her home , " with no worse nor better guard , But with a knave of common hire , a gondolier . " Which is as if he had apprised a man like Lord Grey or the Marquis of Westminster , that his daughter had ...
Página 121
... Desdemona , he says : " I cannot believe that in her ; she is full of most blest conditions . " " Blest fig's - end ! " is his reply . The loath- some opinions he entertains of human nature , arising out of his self - love and absorbing ...
... Desdemona , he says : " I cannot believe that in her ; she is full of most blest conditions . " " Blest fig's - end ! " is his reply . The loath- some opinions he entertains of human nature , arising out of his self - love and absorbing ...
Página 123
... Desdemona , when they meet at Cyprus , he says , with the malignant confidence in future evil of the arch- fiend himself , contemplating the joy of our first parents : - " Oh , you are well tun'd now ! But I'll set down the pegs that ...
... Desdemona , when they meet at Cyprus , he says , with the malignant confidence in future evil of the arch- fiend himself , contemplating the joy of our first parents : - " Oh , you are well tun'd now ! But I'll set down the pegs that ...
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3d Serv action ambition answer Antony Banquo bear Beatrice beauty Benedick British Poets brother Cæsar Caliban Cassio Celia character CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE Clown conduct Cordelia Coriolanus cousin death Desdemona doth drama Duke Enobarbus eyes faith Falconbridge Falstaff father feeling fellow fool gentle gentleman give Hamlet happy hath hear heart Heaven honest honour human humour husband Iago instinct John Julius Cæsar king Lady Lear Leonato look lord Macbeth Malvolio master Master Doctor merry mind mistress moral murder nature never night noble Octavius Othello passion perfect person philosophy play plot poet poet's poetical Polonius Pompey poor prince qualities queen remarkable replies Richard Richard III Rosalind says scene sense Shakespeare Shylock soldier soul speak specimen speech spirit sweet thee thing Thomas Carlyle thou art thought tion true turn Twelfth Night uttered virtue whole wife woman womanly women words worthy young