“The” Works of Shakespeare, Volumen33Methuen, 1904 |
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Página xvii
... Lear is one of the best examples of this , when he has Lear and Gloucester , Cordelia and Edgar , Edmund and Regan and Goneril in pairs or groups , in which strong resemblances are mingled with subtle differences . The plot of Titus was ...
... Lear is one of the best examples of this , when he has Lear and Gloucester , Cordelia and Edgar , Edmund and Regan and Goneril in pairs or groups , in which strong resemblances are mingled with subtle differences . The plot of Titus was ...
Página xxiv
... Lear , could never have had , in the crudest days of his youth , aught to do with Titus Andronicus , is about as absurd as it is possible for anything to be . What , then , are the elements in Titus Andronicus which to modern taste are ...
... Lear , could never have had , in the crudest days of his youth , aught to do with Titus Andronicus , is about as absurd as it is possible for anything to be . What , then , are the elements in Titus Andronicus which to modern taste are ...
Página xxxiii
... the seemingly obvious fact that in the character of Titus we have strong sug- gestions of no less than three of the great male characters с in his acknowledged masterpieces , namely , Lear , Coriolanus INTRODUCTION xxxiii.
... the seemingly obvious fact that in the character of Titus we have strong sug- gestions of no less than three of the great male characters с in his acknowledged masterpieces , namely , Lear , Coriolanus INTRODUCTION xxxiii.
Página xxxiv
... Lear is perhaps the most complete and significant . The faults of Titus ' character and that of his family , from which , as in Lear , the whole tragic situation arises , are identical . Just as Lear fancied he had a true and ...
... Lear is perhaps the most complete and significant . The faults of Titus ' character and that of his family , from which , as in Lear , the whole tragic situation arises , are identical . Just as Lear fancied he had a true and ...
Página xxxv
... Lear and Hamlet . That his madness , like Hamlet's , was mainly assumed , I think there can be no doubt ; for ... Lear's madness is , of course , not feigned , but that of Edgar in the same play is . Shakespeare , indeed , is very fond ...
... Lear and Hamlet . That his madness , like Hamlet's , was mainly assumed , I think there can be no doubt ; for ... Lear's madness is , of course , not feigned , but that of Edgar in the same play is . Shakespeare , indeed , is very fond ...
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Aaron Alarbus Bassianus blood brother character Chaucer child Chiron clown Coriolanus Cymbeline death deed Demetrius Dict dost doth dramatic dramatist Elizabethan emperor empress Enter Exeunt eyes father favour friends gentle give Goths gracious Hamlet hand hath heart heaven Henry Henry VI honour horrible hunt Iago Julius Cæsar kill Lady Lavinia Lear live lord Love's Labour's Lost Lucius Lucrece lust Macbeth Marc Marcus Marlowe means modern Moor moral murder Mutius noble Othello passion Philomela play plot Publius queen Quint rape Ravenscroft repent revenge revolting Richard Richard III Roman Rome Rome's Romeo Romeo and Juliet Saturninus scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's authorship Shakespearian Sonnets sons sorrow Spanish Tragedy speak speare speare's speech Steevens story sweet Tamora tears Tereus thee thine thou hast Titus Andronicus tongue tragedy tribunes verse villain word writing ΙΟ
Pasajes populares
Página xliv - Let me not to the marriage of true minds Admit impediments. Love is not love Which alters when it alteration finds, Or bends with the remover to remove: O, no ! it is an ever-fixed mark, That looks on tempests and is never shaken; It is the star to every wandering bark, Whose worth's unknown, although his height be taken.