the Slave of Life1955 |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 46
Page 54
... tragedy is to excite and cleanse , and Aristotle himself obviously means misericordiam , since clementia , having no truck with emotion , could not be excited by tragedy or by anything else . Moreover , he obviously regards it in ...
... tragedy is to excite and cleanse , and Aristotle himself obviously means misericordiam , since clementia , having no truck with emotion , could not be excited by tragedy or by anything else . Moreover , he obviously regards it in ...
Page 76
... tragedy than any other but Macbeth ; for if it lacks the ultimate terror of damnation it has , for the hero ... tragedy . Even its actual position , at the end of the tragedies and the beginning of the histories , hardly encourages the ...
... tragedy than any other but Macbeth ; for if it lacks the ultimate terror of damnation it has , for the hero ... tragedy . Even its actual position , at the end of the tragedies and the beginning of the histories , hardly encourages the ...
Page 78
... tragedies as a whole . Yet this is , I think , the surface edge of a deeper distinction , between the ideal perfection ... tragedy begins , is precisely the fiction of emotion divorced from reason . Macbeth , a combination of Richard of ...
... tragedies as a whole . Yet this is , I think , the surface edge of a deeper distinction , between the ideal perfection ... tragedy begins , is precisely the fiction of emotion divorced from reason . Macbeth , a combination of Richard of ...
Contents
The Hypothesis in History and Comedy | 33 |
The First Testing Corruption and Salvation | 76 |
The Second TestingCorruption and Salvation | 125 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Slave of Life: A Study of Shakespeare and the Idea of Justice. -- Marion Hope Parker No preview available - 2021 |
Common terms and phrases
action Angelo appears Aquinas Arden Aristotle become blood Catholic cause character charity choice Christ Christian Claudius clementia comedy Cordelia corruption Cymbeline damnation death divine doctrine doth Duke Elizabethan eternal Ethics evil eyes fact faith father fool forgive Fripp God's Goneril grace Hamlet hath heaven Henry Henry VI honour human Iago intellectual Isabella John Shakespeare judgement justice king knowledge Lear Lear's live lord lust Macbeth man's Measure for Measure Merchant of Venice mercy merely metaphysical mind misericordia Montaigne moral nature Ophelia Othello PANDARUS Papist pardon perhaps phrase pity Plato play plot Polonius pray pride Prospero punishment reality reason recusant redeemed redemption Regan repentance revelation revenge Richard Richard III says scene seems Senecan sense shadow Shakespearian soul speech St Augustine St Thomas suffering suggests Summa Tempest Temple Grafton thee theological things Thomist tion tragedy Troilus and Cressida true truth virtue word