The Heroic Idiom of Shakespearean TragedyUniversity of Delaware Press, 1985 - 254 sider Shakespeare's idiom is an aggregate of archaic modes of speech and codes of conduct. This book attempts to make that idiom more accessible and, in the process, to illuminate the significance of heroic concepts to a study of Shakespeare's tragedies and histories. |
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Side 104
... rage when Aufidius taunts him with “ breaking his oath and resolution " ( 1. 97 ) , anathema to a hero . His rage is all the pretext Aufidius needs to set his conspirators upon Coriolanus for what looks like an unpremeditated murder ...
... rage when Aufidius taunts him with “ breaking his oath and resolution " ( 1. 97 ) , anathema to a hero . His rage is all the pretext Aufidius needs to set his conspirators upon Coriolanus for what looks like an unpremeditated murder ...
Side 128
... rage in response to his flatterers ' ingratitude , and this may have inspired Shakespeare to create a Timon of more heroic proportions : ffire water sworde confounde yee , let the crowes ffeede on your peckt out entrailes , and your ...
... rage in response to his flatterers ' ingratitude , and this may have inspired Shakespeare to create a Timon of more heroic proportions : ffire water sworde confounde yee , let the crowes ffeede on your peckt out entrailes , and your ...
Side 202
... rage seriously when we hear in it an echo of Cleopatra's ludicrous self- indulgence . His tone shifts , however - and with it , our sympathies - when rage gives way to an elegiac expression of lost heroism . " Approach , there ! " he ...
... rage seriously when we hear in it an echo of Cleopatra's ludicrous self- indulgence . His tone shifts , however - and with it , our sympathies - when rage gives way to an elegiac expression of lost heroism . " Approach , there ! " he ...
Indhold
Acknowledgments | 9 |
Heroism in the Early Plays | 26 |
A Repudiation of the Past | 51 |
Copyright | |
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absolute Achilles admiration allusion Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Apemantus assertion audience Aufidius blood Brower Brutus Caesar character chivalric comedy comic conqueror context Coriolanus Coriolanus's Cressida critics curses dare daughters death deeds Desdemona diction dramatic echoes eiron Elizabethan epic ethos faith Flavius Fool Hamlet hath heart Hector Henry Henry VI Hercules heroic idiom heroic traditions heroism Hieronimo honor Hotspur hyperbole Iago Iago's ideal imagery irony King Lear kingship Laertes lament language Lear's legend London Macbeth madness medieval mimesis mimetic misanthropy moral murder nature noble Othello parody passion play play's Princeton rage rant reality reprint Reuben Brower revenge rhetorical Richard Richard III role Roman satire scene Senecan Shake Shakespeare Survey Shakespearean Tragedy soul speaks speare speech stoic suggests sword Talbot Tamburlaine thee thou Timon of Athens tion Titus Titus Andronicus tragic hero Troilus Troilus and Cressida Troilus's Troy Ulysses University Press vaunt vows York