Later ShakespeareJohn Russell Brown, Bernard Harris Edward Arnold, 1966 - 264 ページ |
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... provides a natural bridge between Timon , who forecast his career ( as Plutarch tells us ) , and Coriolanus , who formed his Roman ' parallel ' . Certainly Shakespeare's Coriolanus provides the obvious instance of exile and hatred to be ...
... provides a natural bridge between Timon , who forecast his career ( as Plutarch tells us ) , and Coriolanus , who formed his Roman ' parallel ' . Certainly Shakespeare's Coriolanus provides the obvious instance of exile and hatred to be ...
18 ページ
... providing him therefore with an alternative vision of life- this loss is to be associated with a decline in the ... provide : Honour , love , obedience , troops of friends , but , of course , he tries to act as if he did not know , as if ...
... providing him therefore with an alternative vision of life- this loss is to be associated with a decline in the ... provide : Honour , love , obedience , troops of friends , but , of course , he tries to act as if he did not know , as if ...
173 ページ
... provides him with the code - cypher to the play's form , and this he must endeavour to transmit faithfully to any audience . Rome is the starting point , a city which , notwithstanding its republican constitution , resembles the London ...
... provides him with the code - cypher to the play's form , and this he must endeavour to transmit faithfully to any audience . Rome is the starting point , a city which , notwithstanding its republican constitution , resembles the London ...
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action actors Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appears Ariel audience Autolycus Beaumont and Fletcher Blackfriars Caliban character clown comedy Comedy of Errors comic conventions Coriolanus criticism Cymbeline dance death down-stage dramatic dramatist dream earlier effect elements Elizabethan Emilia Enobarbus evidence exile expression Ferdinand final Florizel Globe gods Gonzalo Gower Hamlet Henry VIII Hermione hero honour human imagination Imogen Jacobean Jonson King King's King's Men last plays last scene laughter Lear Leontes lines lovers Macbeth Martius masque Miranda moral Mucedorus narrative nature Noble Kinsmen Octavius Othello Palamon and Arcite Pandosto past pastoral Perdita performance perhaps Pericles play's plot poetic political Polixenes Posthumus present Prince Prospero Queen reference reunion romance Rome Sebastian seems sense Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays Shakespearian soliloquy solo speech speak stage stage-direction story Strachey style suggest tells Tempest theatre theatrical theme Theseus thou Timon tragedies up-stage vision Winter's Tale