| David Craig - 1975 - 532 pages
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| British Academy - 1977 - 398 pages
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| William Shakespeare - 1976 - 328 pages
...Desdemona, Cassio is not a fully rounded figure. He has the 'ingraft infirmity' of being easily made drunk, 'To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast' (II. iii. 295-6), hence he is 'sudden and quick in quarrel', and keeps a courtesan whose presence he... | |
| Kenneth Muir, Philip Edwards - 1977 - 140 pages
...Moreover, though Cassio feels in n, iii that his drunkenness was the greatest part of his fault and says: I will ask him for my place again: he shall tell me I am a drunkard, (306-7) he never mentions the drinking incident in the latter part, nor do any of the other characters,... | |
| Robert Scholes - 1978 - 1398 pages
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