William Shakespeare, the Histories: Richard III, King John, Richard II, Henry VBritish Council, 1962 - 55 Seiten |
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Seite 14
... early 1590's the author of Woodstock knew what response he would get from his audience when he made the bad Judge , Tresilian , say , ' It shall be law , what I shall say is law ... I rule the law'.1 Where , then , did Shakespeare take ...
... early 1590's the author of Woodstock knew what response he would get from his audience when he made the bad Judge , Tresilian , say , ' It shall be law , what I shall say is law ... I rule the law'.1 Where , then , did Shakespeare take ...
Seite 16
... early plays show an increasingly subtle relation between observation and what - for want of a better word - we may call inward- ness . It is observation that strips off pretence , shows us how the world goes , points a useful moral ...
... early plays show an increasingly subtle relation between observation and what - for want of a better word - we may call inward- ness . It is observation that strips off pretence , shows us how the world goes , points a useful moral ...
Seite 49
... Early English Text Society Journal of English Literary History Journal of English and Germanic Philology Modern Language Review Publications of the Modern Languages Association of ELH : JEGP : MLQ : Modern Language Quarterly MLR : PMLA ...
... Early English Text Society Journal of English Literary History Journal of English and Germanic Philology Modern Language Review Publications of the Modern Languages Association of ELH : JEGP : MLQ : Modern Language Quarterly MLR : PMLA ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
William Shakespeare, the Histories: Richard III, King John, Richard II, Henry V Lionel Charles Knights Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1962 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Angel with Horns Bastard bibliography blood Bolingbroke Bonamy Dobrée Buckingham Cambridge character Chorus chronicle material COMEDIES conscience Dauphin Derek Traversi doth Dover Wilson drama E. M. W. Tillyard Eliz Elizabeth Elizabethan England English essay explicit felt presence Folio Richard Folio text formal French G. B. Harrison G. S. Fraser garden Gloucester Harfleur hath Homilies appointed Honour J. I. M. Stewart Jocelyn Brooke Kenneth Muir King John L. C. KNIGHTS M. C. Bradbrook M. R. Ridley Macbeth Mirror for Magistrates Modern editions Moral History nameth nature obedience pattern PMLA political plays Political Thought Prince Quarto rebellion rhetorical Richard III Rossiter ruler says scene Second Murderer sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's Histories Shakespeare's Richard simply sins sixteenth century society soldiers soliloquy speech swear text of Richard TEXTUAL STUDIES thee theme Thomas thou thyself Tillyard Tragedy Troublesome Reign Tudor view W. W. Greg William Woodstock young