Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 36 |
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Page 69
ANNUAL SHAKESPEARE LECTURE THE EMERGENCE OF SHAKESPEARE'S TRAGEDY By H. V. D. DYSON Read 26 April 1950 THE ... to deliver the Annual Shakespeare Lecture of the British Academy for 1950 by considering the tragedies in some- what general ...
ANNUAL SHAKESPEARE LECTURE THE EMERGENCE OF SHAKESPEARE'S TRAGEDY By H. V. D. DYSON Read 26 April 1950 THE ... to deliver the Annual Shakespeare Lecture of the British Academy for 1950 by considering the tragedies in some- what general ...
Page 75
Tragedy gives us an imagined world , as Christianity claims to offer us a real world , in which the strangling futilities of life have room enough to die . In spite of the conventions of the theatre , even those of the modern theatre ...
Tragedy gives us an imagined world , as Christianity claims to offer us a real world , in which the strangling futilities of life have room enough to die . In spite of the conventions of the theatre , even those of the modern theatre ...
Page 93
The endings are not the death - endings of tragedy but the endings of quarrels , of misunderstandings , of sorrows . ... If death was the revealer of values in the tragedies , it is now time , in tragedy the separator and destroyer ...
The endings are not the death - endings of tragedy but the endings of quarrels , of misunderstandings , of sorrows . ... If death was the revealer of values in the tragedies , it is now time , in tragedy the separator and destroyer ...
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Contents
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS By Sir H I Bell | 15 |
ALESSANDRO MANZONI Italian Lecture By A P dEntrèves | 23 |
MORAL PRINCIPLES AND INDUCTIVE POLICIES Philosophical | 51 |
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Academy action already appear become beginning British Bust called century character Chaucer College course criticism death decennalia draped early English example fact France friends give hand Head historians human important inductive interest Italian Italy kind knowledge language later laureate lecture less manuscript Manzoni material means mind moral nature never occasion once past perhaps period play poet poetry possible present problem Professor publication published question reason recorded reference religion remark rhetorical Rome scholars seems sense standing suscepta Tale things tion tragedy true truth turn University Victory volume vota vows Welsh Wordsworth writing written