Shakespeare's Political Plays, Band 10Random House, 1967 - 241 Seiten |
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Seite 47
... death : " O that it were to do ! What have we done ? Didst ever hear a man so penitent ? " ( III.ii.3-4 ) . Now we hear about the state of the dying Cardinal , who had taken the initiative in proposing that murder . Like Lady Macbeth's ...
... death : " O that it were to do ! What have we done ? Didst ever hear a man so penitent ? " ( III.ii.3-4 ) . Now we hear about the state of the dying Cardinal , who had taken the initiative in proposing that murder . Like Lady Macbeth's ...
Seite 91
... death is one of the most memorable speeches of the play : Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death And shall the same give pardon to a slave ? My brother slew no man ; his fault was thought , And yet his punishment was cruel death ...
... death is one of the most memorable speeches of the play : Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death And shall the same give pardon to a slave ? My brother slew no man ; his fault was thought , And yet his punishment was cruel death ...
Seite 214
... death an hundred senators . ( IV.iii.173-5 ) In the face of this holocaust , Brutus can find nothing more significant to say than : Therein our letters do not well agree ; Mine speak of seventy senators that died . ( IV.iii.176-7 ) He ...
... death an hundred senators . ( IV.iii.173-5 ) In the face of this holocaust , Brutus can find nothing more significant to say than : Therein our letters do not well agree ; Mine speak of seventy senators that died . ( IV.iii.176-7 ) He ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 3 |
Richard III | 75 |
PART | 106 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept achieve action Aeschylus already appears authority Bastard battle become begins Brutus Caesar Cassius character complex concerned contrast Coriolanus course crown death earlier effective Elizabethan England English established fact fails Falstaff father favor fear feels figure finally forces France French further give Gloucester hand hath head heart Henry Henry's history play Hotspur human initiative interest issues Joan John John's judgment kind king king's land later less lines live look Lord Margaret means medieval merely mind moral murder nature never once opening peace personality political present Prince proves Providence queen reason recognize reflects remains response result rhetoric Richard Richard III role scene seems sense Shakespeare shows situation soliloquy speech spirit success Suffolk suggests thee theme thou throne tion true turn ultimate values virtue York
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Shakespeare's English and Roman History Plays: A Marxist Approach Paul N. Siegel Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1986 |