A brief introduction to Shakespeare's tragedy
Shakespeare's Tragedy Collection contains four representative tragedies of Shakespeare, namely Romeo and Juliet (1595), Hamlet (160 1), Othello (1604) and Macbeth (1. Of these four works, Romeo and Juliet ends in tragedy, but because of its comedy atmosphere, the script is full of youth and spring. The romanticism in Hamlet is less and less, and the realistic description is more and more prominent. Othello made a profound and powerful criticism on the evil forces in the real society. In Macbeth's works, the ideal and brilliant positive characters no longer appear, and Shakespeare's humanistic ideal is increasingly disillusioned. All these works profoundly exposed the social problems and human tragedies that existed at that time and represented Shakespeare's most outstanding achievements.