King LearClarendon, 1960 - 256 pages |
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Page 42
... nature can reason it thus and thus , yet nature finds itself 105 scourged by the sequent effects . Love cools , friend- ship falls off , brothers divide : in cities , mutinies ; in countries , discord ; in palaces , treason ; and the ...
... nature can reason it thus and thus , yet nature finds itself 105 scourged by the sequent effects . Love cools , friend- ship falls off , brothers divide : in cities , mutinies ; in countries , discord ; in palaces , treason ; and the ...
Page 138
... nature from the general curse Which twain have brought her to . Edgar . Hail , gentle sir ! Gentleman . Sir , speed ... nature , disgraced by Goneril and Regan [ N ] . you . 206 nature : human 208 ( God ) speed Edgar . Do you hear aught ...
... nature from the general curse Which twain have brought her to . Edgar . Hail , gentle sir ! Gentleman . Sir , speed ... nature , disgraced by Goneril and Regan [ N ] . you . 206 nature : human 208 ( God ) speed Edgar . Do you hear aught ...
Page 170
... Nature with its derivatives and their opposites is the dominant idea of the play . It is , of course , the conduct of Goneril and Regan that is ' unnatural ' , as is that of Gloucester's ' natural ' son towards his parent . [ The word ' ...
... Nature with its derivatives and their opposites is the dominant idea of the play . It is , of course , the conduct of Goneril and Regan that is ' unnatural ' , as is that of Gloucester's ' natural ' son towards his parent . [ The word ' ...
Contents
King Lear | 7 |
Shakespeares Sources and his use of them | 14 |
The Text of the Play | 18 |
4 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
A. C. BRADLEY Alack Albany answer bastard Bradley Burgundy character Cordelia Cornwall daughters dear death dost doth Dover dramatic duke Duke of Cornwall Edgar Edith Sitwell editors Edmund Elizabethan Exeunt Exit eyes father favour feel follow Fool fortune France Gentleman give Gloucester GLOUCESTER'S CASTLE gods Goneril and Regan grace Hamlet hast hath hear heart heaven honour human imagery J. W. MACKAIL Kent King Lear kingdom knave L. C. KNIGHTS lady Lear's Leir letter lines lord Macbeth madam master meaning mind nature never night noble nuncle Oswald Othello passion perhaps Perillus pity play plot poor pray R. W. Chambers scene sense servant Shakespeare Shakespearean Tragedy sister sonne Sophocles speak speech stage stand storm tell thee thine thing thou art thought tragedy tragic unnatural unto villain W. W. Greg words