Commentary and Control in Shakespeare's Plays |
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Page 60
... attitudes- earthy , " realistic , " cautious , or conventionally ethical - which the action and the poetry declare to be inadequate ' . " But what is there , in these terms , to distinguish the attitude of a supposed commen- tator like ...
... attitudes- earthy , " realistic , " cautious , or conventionally ethical - which the action and the poetry declare to be inadequate ' . " But what is there , in these terms , to distinguish the attitude of a supposed commen- tator like ...
Page 92
... attitudes side by side , and no - one need have the ground completely taken out from under him . Even Jaques ... attitudes into contact with each other , in a setting that requires nothing of the characters beyond the enjoyable ...
... attitudes side by side , and no - one need have the ground completely taken out from under him . Even Jaques ... attitudes into contact with each other , in a setting that requires nothing of the characters beyond the enjoyable ...
Page 221
... attitudes toward a character can almost always enrich our experience ' , and discusses the need to keep open ' The ... attitude ... is meant to be ours — his total attitude , which is the total attitude of the play ' . Leavis calls ...
... attitudes toward a character can almost always enrich our experience ' , and discusses the need to keep open ' The ... attitude ... is meant to be ours — his total attitude , which is the total attitude of the play ' . Leavis calls ...
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Common terms and phrases
action aesthetic Alfred Harbage All's Antony and Cleopatra Apemantus Arden argues artist attitude Berowne Bertram Bilton Bolingbroke Brutus choric chorus Claudio comedy comic commentary Coriolanus critical death discusses dramatic authority dramatist Duke E. K. Chambers Elizabethan emotional Enobarbus evil experience Falstaff Faulconbridge feel Feste final Fool Friar Laurence gives Hamlet hear Helena Henry hero honour Iago illusion interpretation irony Jaques John Russell Brown judgement Julius Caesar L. C. Knights Lear's London lovers Macbeth main characters Marcus Measure for Measure Midsummer Night's Dream moral Muriel Bradbrook nature Othello Pericles play's plot political Prince Prospero response Richard Richard III role romance Romeo and Juliet Rosalind satirical says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Shylock speaks spectator speech stage structure theme Thersites thou Tillyard Timon of Athens Titus Andronicus Touchstone tragedy tragic Troilus and Cressida Wilson Knight words