King LearLoyola University Press, 1930 - 279 pages |
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Page 24
... characters calling on their gods and living in the hope of one day reaching the Elysian Fields . There is much interest on the part of those devoted to the care of the insane to find that Shakespeare understood the growth of the disease ...
... characters calling on their gods and living in the hope of one day reaching the Elysian Fields . There is much interest on the part of those devoted to the care of the insane to find that Shakespeare understood the growth of the disease ...
Page 32
... characters are alone , working their way through life blindly , misdirected all of them , un- less we except Cordelia , Kent , and the Fool . Their deaths are pagan in the lack of grief expressed . The wicked die like animals , the ...
... characters are alone , working their way through life blindly , misdirected all of them , un- less we except Cordelia , Kent , and the Fool . Their deaths are pagan in the lack of grief expressed . The wicked die like animals , the ...
Page 256
... character of those who do so ? 16. Cordelia charges her sisters with saying that they will not have any love left for their husbands . Lines 96-97 . Is this true ? Lines 48-54 , 62-69 . 17. Describe the religion professed by the characters ...
... character of those who do so ? 16. Cordelia charges her sisters with saying that they will not have any love left for their husbands . Lines 96-97 . Is this true ? Lines 48-54 , 62-69 . 17. Describe the religion professed by the characters ...
Contents
BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE | 7 |
THE STORY OF KING LEAR | 14 |
COMMENTS ON KING LEAR | 20 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
Alack ALBANY Anne Hathaway arms attasked bear Bedlam better brother Burgundy cause characters Child Rowland comes Cordelia CORNWALL curse daugh daughters dear death decasyllable Dover Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Burgundy Duke of Cornwall duty Earl of Gloucester Edmund evil Exeunt Exit eyes father favor fear feel follow FOOL fortune foul fiend GENTLEMAN give GLOUCESTER'S castle gods Goneril and Regan grace hate hath hear heart heaven honor husband KENT Kent's King Lear King of France kingdom knave lady Lear's Lines live look lord madam master Merchant of Venice MESSENGER mind nature night noble nuncle OSWALD pity play Poet poor pray thee Prithee SCENE seek servant Shakespeare Show sister slave speak speech stand storm suffering sword tell there's thine things thou art thought tragedy traitor trumpet unnatural villain virtue wicked William Shakespeare words