Table of Contents | Previous Page | Next Page |
|
PAGE 496
Historical tragedies, 3, 53, 71. Homer, 348. Horatio, 99, 112, 310, Notes A, B, C. Humour, constructional use of, 61; Hamlet's, 149-52; in Othello, 177; in Macbeth, 395.
Iago, and evil, 207, 232-3; false views of, 208-11, 223-7; danger of accepting his own evidence 211-2, 222-5; how he appeared to others, 213-5; and to Emilia, 215-6, 439-40; inferences hence, 217-8; further analysis, 218-22; source of his action, 222-31; his tragedy, 218, 222, 232; not merely evil, 233-5; nor of supreme intellect, 236; cause of failure, 236-7; and Edmund, 245, 300-1, 464; and Hamlet, 208, 217, 222, 226; other references, 21, 28, 32, 192, 193, 196, 364, Notes L, M, P, Q. Improbability, not always a defect 69; in King Lear, 249, 256-7. Inconsistencies, 73; real or supposed, in Hamlet, 408; in Othello, Note I; in King Lear, 256, Note T; in Macbeth, Notes CC, EE. Ingram, Prof., 478. Insanity in tragedy, 13; Ophelia's, 164-5, 399; Lear's, 288-90. Intrigue in tragedy, 12, 67, 179.
Jealousy in Othello, 178, 194, Note L. Job, 11. Johnson, 31, 91, 294, 298, 304, 377, 420. Julius Caesar, 3, 7, 9, 33, 34, 479; conflict, 17-8; exposition, 43-5; crisis, 52; dragging, 57; counter-stroke, 58; quarrel-scene, 60-1; battle-scenes, 62; and Hamlet, 80-2; style, 85-6. Justice in tragedy, idea of, 31-33, 279, 318.
Kent, 307-10, 314, 321, 447, Note W. King Claudius, 28, 102, 133, 137, 142, 168-72, 402, 422. King Lear, exposition, 44, 46-7; conflict, 17, 53-4; scenes of high and low tension, 49; dragging, 57; false hope before catastrophe, 63; battle-scene, 62, 456-8; soliloquy in, 72, 222, place among tragedies, 82, 88, see Tate; Tate's, 243-4; twofold character, 244-6; not wholly dramatic, 247; opening scene, 71, 249-51, 258, 319-21, 447; blinding of Gloster, 185, 251; catastrophe, 250-4, 271, 290-3, 309, 322-6; structural defects, 254-6; improbabilities etc., 256-8; vagueness of locality, 259-60, poetic value of defects, 261, double action 262; characterisation, 263, tendency to symbolism, 264-5, idea of monstrosity, 265-6; beast and man, 266-8; storm-scenes, 269-70, 286-7, 315; question of government of world, in, 271-3; supposed pessimism, 273-9, 284-5, 303-4, 322-30; accident and fatality, 15, 250-4, 287-8; intrigue in, 179; evil in, 298, 303-4; preaching patience, 330; and Othello, 176-7, 179, 181, 244-5, 441-3; and Timon, 245-7, 310, 326-7, 443-5; other references, 8, 10, 61, 181, Notes R to Y, and BB. König, G., Note BB. Koppel, R., 306, 450, 453, 462.
Lamb, 202, 243, 248, 253, 255, 269, 343. Language, Shakespeare's, defects of, 73, 75, 416. Lear, 13, 14, 20, 28, 29, 32, 249-51, 280-93, 293-5, Note W. |
Table of Contents | Previous Page | Next Page |