The Good that Lives After Them: A Pattern in Shakespeare's Tragedies |
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Page 37
... Christ by asking him whether they should pay tribute to Caesar : " But he , knowing their hypocrisy , said unto them ... Christian iconography such flights commonly accompany Christ while dying and after death . Lastly , Hamlet's phrase ...
... Christ by asking him whether they should pay tribute to Caesar : " But he , knowing their hypocrisy , said unto them ... Christian iconography such flights commonly accompany Christ while dying and after death . Lastly , Hamlet's phrase ...
Page 210
... Christian eschatology comes as something of a shock -- like the bell which precedes it . In the previous part of this soliloquy we and Macbeth inhabit a distinctly non - Christian world with distinctly non - Christian ethics : in this ...
... Christian eschatology comes as something of a shock -- like the bell which precedes it . In the previous part of this soliloquy we and Macbeth inhabit a distinctly non - Christian world with distinctly non - Christian ethics : in this ...
Page 232
... Christian world , the aftermath of those crimes is played out in a largely un - Christian world where moral and religious issues have little place . The play cannot and does not entirely avoid judging and condemning Macbeth , and there ...
... Christian world , the aftermath of those crimes is played out in a largely un - Christian world where moral and religious issues have little place . The play cannot and does not entirely avoid judging and condemning Macbeth , and there ...
Contents
Hamlets Other Purpose | 12 |
King Lear and Macbeth the First Love Test | 39 |
King Lear and Macbeth the Second Love Test | 100 |
Copyright | |
2 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
abdication actions ambitious androgyny Antony and Cleopatra apparitions asserts attribute audience Banquo's ghost behavior bond character Christian cited compositional pattern contrast Cordelia courage course crimes criticize dagger daughter death desire deuteragonist discussion divine grace dramatic ennui ethical evidence evil explicitly express fact father fear Gentleman Goneril and Regan grace grief Hamlet Hecuba implies interpretation Kent kill Duncan kind of manliness King Lear kingship Lady Macbeth Laertes later Lear and Macbeth Lear's least lines love test Macduff meaninglessness means merely moral murder nature never nothingness Ophelia Othello pangs of conscience passage perhaps person phrase play play's Polonius possess primary motives protagonist purpose reaction reason reference regicide relationship religious revenge Richard III Romeo and Juliet Rosenberg sacrifice says scene secondary motives seems sense Shakespeare significance sisters Siward soliloquy someone speaks speech suggests suicide things thou tragedy tragic victims virtue wants wife witches words