Lost Angels of a Ruined Paradise: Themes of Cosmic Strife in Romantic Tragedy |
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Page 8
Secondly , the major crime is an offence committed against a father or a father figure . The first three plays , Wordsworth's The Borderers , Coleridge's Remorse and Keats's Otho the Great are , in contemporary parlance , costume plays ...
Secondly , the major crime is an offence committed against a father or a father figure . The first three plays , Wordsworth's The Borderers , Coleridge's Remorse and Keats's Otho the Great are , in contemporary parlance , costume plays ...
Page 30
What is the degree of Oswald's complicity in and responsibility for this crime against lawful authority and human sympathy ? He does not examine the evidence of the captain's guilt , but accepts it because it feeds the violent and ...
What is the degree of Oswald's complicity in and responsibility for this crime against lawful authority and human sympathy ? He does not examine the evidence of the captain's guilt , but accepts it because it feeds the violent and ...
Page 36
He describes his fall , as being " betrayed into crime ” by the crew of his ship . The reason for the original crime , however , that is , the crew's “ foul conspiracy against [ his ] honour ” is left vague and undefined .
He describes his fall , as being " betrayed into crime ” by the crew of his ship . The reason for the original crime , however , that is , the crew's “ foul conspiracy against [ his ] honour ” is left vague and undefined .
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Contents
Introduction 833562119 | 7 |
Wordsworths | 14 |
Coleridges REMORSE | 45 |
Copyright | |
4 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
accept action Adam affirm alienation allegorical Alvar appears associated Auranthe Beatrice Beatrice's beauty becomes blind blood Borderers brother Byron called cause Cenci centre character claims Coleridge Coleridge's comes Consequently cosmic crime darkness death demonic denies describes desire despair destruction dilemma direction divine drama effect error evil existence experience face fact faith fall fallen father feels figure final follows forces guilt heart Heaven Hell Herbert hero hero's heroine hope human Idonea Infinite innocence Keats Letter light loss lovers Ludolph man's Manfred Manfred's Marmaduke moral murder Nature offence Ordonio original Oswald Otho Paradise perfection play poet poet's presented Press question realm recognize relationship Remorse representative responsible reversal revolutionary role Romantic Satan scene seems sense Shelley Shelley's significance Spirit spite stands structure suffering symbolic takes Teresa things tion tragedy tragic truth turns tyrannical ultimately union universe villain vision wants wedding Wordsworth's