Tuesday, August 25, 2020

10 Shakespeare Quotes on Tragedy

10 Shakespeare Quotes on Tragedy Shakespeares plays have contributed the absolute most well known expressions from the entirety of writing, and none are more vital than those from his catastrophes, probablyâ the best spot to discover cites on disaster. There is banter over which of his plays are disasters Troilus and Cressida some of the time is incorporated, for instance yet here is the best-recollected awful statement from every one of the troubadours plays normally positioned in the tragedyâ category: Statements From Shakespeares Tragedies Romeo and JulietNo, tis not all that profound as a well, nor so wide as a congregation entryway; yet tis enough, twill serve. Ask for me tomorrow, and you will discover me a grave man. I am peppered, I warrant, for this world. A plague o both your houses!(Mercutio, Act 3, Scene 1)HamletTo be, or not to be-that is the question:Whether tis nobler in the brain to sufferThe slings and bolts of over the top fortune,Or to take arms against an ocean of troublesAnd by contradicting end them.(Hamlet, Act 3, Scene 1)MacbethIs this a knife which I see before me,The handle toward my hand? Come, let me grip thee!I have thee not, but then I see thee still.Art thou not, lethal vision, sensibleTo feeling as to locate? or on the other hand craftsmanship thou butA blade of the psyche, a bogus creationProceeding from the warmth abused brain?(Macbeth, Act 2, Scene 1)Julius CaesarO conspiracy,Shamst thou to show thy risky forehead by night,When shades of malice are most free?(Brutus, Act 2, Scene 1)O thelloO, be careful, my ruler, of jealousy!It is the green-peered toward beast, which doth mockThe meat it takes care of on.(Iago, Act 3, Scene 3) Ruler LearNothing will happen to nothing.(King Lear, Act 1, Scene 1)Antony and CleopatraLet Rome in Tiber meltâ and the wide archOf the extended realm fall. Here is my space.Kingdoms are dirt; our dungy earth alikeFeeds brute as man. The nobleness of lifeIs to do therefore; when such a shared pairAnd such a twain can dot.(Antony, Act 1, Scene 1)Titus AndronicusVengeance is in my heart, passing in my hand,Blood and vengeance are pounding in my head.(Aaron, Act 2, Scene 3)CoriolanusLike a dull entertainer now,I have overlooked my part, and I am out,Even to a full disgrace.(Coriolanus, Act 5, Scene 3)Timon of AthensHere lies a pitiful body, of pathetic soul bereft;Seek not my name. A plague devour you fiendish caitiffs left!Here lie I, Timon, who alive every living man did hate.Pass by and revile thy fill, however pass, and remain not here thy gait.(Alcibiades, Act 5, Scene 4)

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