Shakespeare-characters; Chiefly Those SubordinateSmith, Elder & Company, 1863 - 521 pagina's |
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... Moral Teacher . It is a pleasure to me thus to give permanence to my hold upon the regard of my former hearers , and to believe that in another form will be recalled the disquisitions we formerly enjoyed together upon the greatest and ...
... Moral Teacher . It is a pleasure to me thus to give permanence to my hold upon the regard of my former hearers , and to believe that in another form will be recalled the disquisitions we formerly enjoyed together upon the greatest and ...
Pagina 25
... moral rectitude . It is he who in the fourth scene of the play makes that fine speech , relating the death of the rebel chieftain , the thane of Cawdor . It con- cludes : - " Nothing in his life Became him like the leaving it : he died ...
... moral rectitude . It is he who in the fourth scene of the play makes that fine speech , relating the death of the rebel chieftain , the thane of Cawdor . It con- cludes : - " Nothing in his life Became him like the leaving it : he died ...
Pagina 26
... moral action in the poet . Although he has made the witches to assume a supremacy over the mind of Macbeth , yet a careful reader of the play will , I think , perceive that they have only done this when they found that mind prepared to ...
... moral action in the poet . Although he has made the witches to assume a supremacy over the mind of Macbeth , yet a careful reader of the play will , I think , perceive that they have only done this when they found that mind prepared to ...
Pagina 27
... moral is enhanced . Had Macbeth been made the mere pas- sive instrument of this principle of evil , without any power of self - control , he would have claimed no other feeling than that of sympathy and commiseration ; and this was by ...
... moral is enhanced . Had Macbeth been made the mere pas- sive instrument of this principle of evil , without any power of self - control , he would have claimed no other feeling than that of sympathy and commiseration ; and this was by ...
Pagina 30
... moral that Shakespeare intended to read to his brother mortals : for , we should bear in mind that Macbeth was , by nature , an honourable and even generous man ; but as he was unable to withstand the impulse of an unworthy ambition ...
... moral that Shakespeare intended to read to his brother mortals : for , we should bear in mind that Macbeth was , by nature , an honourable and even generous man ; but as he was unable to withstand the impulse of an unworthy ambition ...
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3d Serv action admirable ambition answer Antony Antony and Cleopatra Banquo bear Beatrice beauty Benedick British Poets brother Cĉsar Caliban Cassio Celia character CHARLES COWDEN CLARKE Clown conduct Coriolanus cousin death Desdemona doth drama Duke Enobarbus eyes faith Falconbridge Falstaff father feeling fellow fool gentle Gilfillan give Hamlet happy hath hear heart Heaven honest honour human humour husband Iago instinct John Julius Cĉsar king Lady Lear Leonato look lord Macbeth Malvolio master Master Doctor merry mind mistress moral murder nature never night noble Octavius Othello passion perfect person philosophy play plot poet poet's poetical Polonius Pompey prince qualities queen remarkable replies Richard Richard III Rosalind says scene sense Shakespeare Shylock soldier soul speak specimen speech spirit sweet thee thing thou art thought tion true turn Twelfth Night uttered virtue whole wife woman womanly women words worthy young