Critics on MarloweJudith O'Neill University of Miami Press, 1970 - 127 Seiten |
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Seite 82
... Angel , the emissary of the Devil . Thus , at the very beginning of Faustus's temptation , the Good Angel says ( I. i . 71-4 ) : O , Faustus , lay that damned book aside , And gaze not on it , lest it tempt thy soul , And heap God's ...
... Angel , the emissary of the Devil . Thus , at the very beginning of Faustus's temptation , the Good Angel says ( I. i . 71-4 ) : O , Faustus , lay that damned book aside , And gaze not on it , lest it tempt thy soul , And heap God's ...
Seite 101
... angels appear , and as their remarks well illustrate the theological bias I have remarked , I shall quote them in full . The Good Angel opposes Faustus's aspirations only with negatives , the idea of a God of wrath and the ironic ...
... angels appear , and as their remarks well illustrate the theological bias I have remarked , I shall quote them in full . The Good Angel opposes Faustus's aspirations only with negatives , the idea of a God of wrath and the ironic ...
Seite 107
... Angels . Here it is apparent that the drama of Faustus's soul has advanced : the deed of self - damnation is done ... Angel retorts at once ' Thou art a spirit ; God cannot pity thee . ' ( II . ii . 12-13 ) . Greg points the force of ...
... Angels . Here it is apparent that the drama of Faustus's soul has advanced : the deed of self - damnation is done ... Angel retorts at once ' Thou art a spirit ; God cannot pity thee . ' ( II . ii . 12-13 ) . Greg points the force of ...
Inhalt
1965 | 21 |
MODERN CRITICS ON MARLOWE | 28 |
The Second Part of Tamburlaine the Great | 37 |
Urheberrecht | |
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accept action Angel appears attempt Barabas beauty becomes beginning called character Christ Christians clear comes course critics crown death desire despair devil Dr Faustus drama edition Edward Elizabethan English face fact Faustus's fear feeling final follow forces Gaveston give given hand heart Heaven Helen Hell hero Holinshed human idea imagination important interest ironic irony kind King knowledge later leaves less live London look Lord Lucifer magic Malta Marlowe Marlowe's means Mephistophilis mind moral Mortimer murder nature never offers once opening passages passion perhaps pity play pleasure poet presented repent says scene seems sense Shakespeare shows soliloquy soul speech stage suffering suggest sweet Tamburlaine tells thee theme things thou thought tion tragedy tragic turn verse weakness whole writing Zenocrate