Across
- 2. Suffering and calamity befall a ______ person
- 4. Calamities follow _________ from deeds of men
- 6. Tragedy with Shakespeare is always concerned with persons of what?
- 9. Man may be heart rending and mysterious, but not ________
- 11. In Shakespeare's works, the inevitable is a more refined version of ________
- 12. ___ exhibits itself as a principle of death
- 15. Calamities of tragedy come mainly from ______
- 16. Where is this quote from? "Our thoughts are ours, their ends none of our own"
- 17. Almost all Shakespeare's tragic protagonists have a ___________ in a particular direction
- 18. Shakespeare occcasionally represents ______ conditions of the mind
- 20. Shakespeare's greatness comes from his fidelity in a mind of extraordinary _____
- 23. A power which appears to smile on a person for a bit, then on a sudden strikes them down
- 24. It is important for actions and ___________ to be connected
Down
- 1. Everywhere in this tragic world, man's thought as action is transformed to the _____ of itself
- 3. Shakespeare confined his writings to a world of _______________ observation
- 5. Whatever can animate or drive a man's soul
- 7. Tragedy in the end is a painful ________
- 8. Tragedies must have only one hero/heroine (truth/false)
- 10. Deeds that lead to tragedy are not done "____ sleep and wake"
- 13. If Hamlet or Lear really were ___ they would cease to be tragic
- 14. the total collapse of someone or something
- 18. In most of Shakespeare's works a large admission of this might destroy the connection of character, deed, and catatrophe
- 19. Is Job tragic in a Shakespearian sense? yes/nah
- 21. The fate of a prince is more meaningful than a peasant's because it affects the _____ of a whole nation
- 22. We acquiesce because our sense of ______ is satisfied
