Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 37Gale Research Company, 1998 |
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Page 63
... once attached to a citizen house- hold , the woman will be protected by the very insti- tution that once made her vulnerable . The Reforma- tion and the Counter - Reformation , however , brought with them an end to ideologically ...
... once attached to a citizen house- hold , the woman will be protected by the very insti- tution that once made her vulnerable . The Reforma- tion and the Counter - Reformation , however , brought with them an end to ideologically ...
Page 221
... once so grand , so pathetic , and so beautiful as [ King Lear ] " ( Shakespearean Tragedy , 228 ) . It is very diffi- cult to be grand and pathetic at once . What is pre- cisely characteristic of Shakespeare's portrayal of King Lear is ...
... once so grand , so pathetic , and so beautiful as [ King Lear ] " ( Shakespearean Tragedy , 228 ) . It is very diffi- cult to be grand and pathetic at once . What is pre- cisely characteristic of Shakespeare's portrayal of King Lear is ...
Page 255
... once did love me " ( 326 ) . But it is too late - Hamlet now interprets everything by his inference that his old friends have betrayed him ( 327-63 ) . What seems a sincere if desperate and pathetically ill - timed plea for Hamlet to ...
... once did love me " ( 326 ) . But it is too late - Hamlet now interprets everything by his inference that his old friends have betrayed him ( 327-63 ) . What seems a sincere if desperate and pathetically ill - timed plea for Hamlet to ...
Contents
Geraldo U de Sousa The Peasants Revolt and the Writing of History in 2 Henry | 105 |
Historiography and Legitimation in Henry VIII | 122 |
Steve Longstaffe The Limits of Modernity in Shakespeares King John | 132 |
Copyright | |
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Antipholus Antonio Arden argues argument audience Autolycus Bassanio becomes body Brutus Cade Cade's Cambridge Cassius character claim comedy context Coriolanus critics crown cultural death desire discourse dramatic Dromio Duke early modern Edgar Elizabethan England English Erasmus erotic essay father Fletcher gender Gl'Ingannati Greenblatt Hamlet hath Henry VI Henry VIII Henry's history plays Holinshed human Jack Cade John's Julius Caesar King John King Lear king's language Lear's lines London Lord marriage masculine means moral narrative nature noble Orlando Othello Oxford Pandulph play's Plutarch political Portia Queen question Rackin Renaissance rhetoric Richard Richard III role Rosalind says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays social society speare speech stage suggests Talbot theatre Thomas thou Timon tion tradition tragedy trans Tudor Twelfth Night University Press utopian Viola William William Shakespeare Winter's Tale women words writing York