Shakespeare's Tragic Practice |
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Page 23
... Fate ends the feud of the rival households , and that the details of Fate's progress to that end will constitute the very action of the play . Because of the Prologue we hold advantage over all participants even at the moment the action ...
... Fate ends the feud of the rival households , and that the details of Fate's progress to that end will constitute the very action of the play . Because of the Prologue we hold advantage over all participants even at the moment the action ...
Page 32
... Fate itself is ignorant of the true status of the feud as that has been hinted by both Capulet and Montague ? It would be preposterous to suppose that the dramatist means Fate to occupy a lower level of awareness than our own ; hence we ...
... Fate itself is ignorant of the true status of the feud as that has been hinted by both Capulet and Montague ? It would be preposterous to suppose that the dramatist means Fate to occupy a lower level of awareness than our own ; hence we ...
Page 39
... Fate's game . Yet , vital as they are in Fate's programme , these instances of Capulet's pendular swings are mainly illustrative , and preparatory for the later casual decision that a new burst of good humour causes him to make . At ...
... Fate's game . Yet , vital as they are in Fate's programme , these instances of Capulet's pendular swings are mainly illustrative , and preparatory for the later casual decision that a new burst of good humour causes him to make . At ...
Contents
Titus Andronicus | 1 |
Romeo and Juliet | 22 |
Julius Caesar | 52 |
Copyright | |
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Aaron action Andronici Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appears Aufidius awareness Banquo Bassianus Brutus Brutus's Caesar Capulet Cassio Cassius's Claudius comedies conscience Cordelia Coriolanus death deceived Desdemona device dramatic dramatist Duncan earlier Edgar Edmund effect Enobarbus fact false Fate Fate's fear final Friar Gloucester Goneril guilt Hamlet hand hath hear heart hero hero's hold advantage honest honour Horatio Iago Iago's Ibid ignorant immediate innocent intent Julius Caesar Kent Kent's kill King Lear King's Lady Macbeth Laertes Lavinia Lear's lines lord lovers Macduff marriage Menenius Mercutio mind Moor moral murder never noble occasion Octavia Ophelia Othello participants passion perhaps play plot Polonius practice Proculeius rage recognize Regan remains Roderigo Rome Romeo and Juliet Saturninus says scene secret servants Shakespeare situation soliloquy speak speech stands Tamora tells thee thou Thyreus Timon Titus Titus Andronicus Titus's tragedy tribunes truth Tybalt unawareness villain wife Witches words