Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 6Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Page 191
... speech in an equipoise be- tween its imaginative splendour and its clearly individual ( possibly eccentric ) bias . This balancing of antitheses is perhaps even more remarkable in Antony's speech a few lines later , where once more a ...
... speech in an equipoise be- tween its imaginative splendour and its clearly individual ( possibly eccentric ) bias . This balancing of antitheses is perhaps even more remarkable in Antony's speech a few lines later , where once more a ...
Page 232
... speech , we hear him talk of appearing “ in blood , ” of making death love him , of feasting his men and forcing the wine to " peep through their scars " [ I. xiii . 190 ] , as if he would fill them so full they would leak . ( When ...
... speech , we hear him talk of appearing “ in blood , ” of making death love him , of feasting his men and forcing the wine to " peep through their scars " [ I. xiii . 190 ] , as if he would fill them so full they would leak . ( When ...
Page 418
... speech draws the attack on Richard's economic policies into a powerful image of the dissolution of traditional social bonds : England , formerly united in itself and against other nations , is now bound together by economic contracts ...
... speech draws the attack on Richard's economic policies into a powerful image of the dissolution of traditional social bonds : England , formerly united in itself and against other nations , is now bound together by economic contracts ...
Contents
Preface | 7 |
Richard II | 241 |
The Two Gentlemen of Verona | 429 |
Copyright | |
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action Actium Antony and Cleo Antony and Cleopatra Antony's argues asserts audience Aumerle battle of Actium becomes Bishop of Carlisle Bolingbroke Caesar character Charmian critic crown death deposed divine Dolabella dramatic earth Egypt Egyptian elements Elizabethan emotion Enobarbus Eros essay date excerpt feeling final Flint Castle Gaunt give grief hath heart heaven Henry Henry IV hero heroic honor human imagery imagination judgment Julius Caesar king King Lear king's kingship language Lear Lepidus lord lovers Macbeth means moral Mowbray nature noble Octavius Othello paradox passion patra play play's Plutarch poet poetic poetry political Pompey present protagonists queen reality rhetoric Richard Richard II Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet royal says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare speaks speare speare's speech suggests thee theme things thou thought throne tragedy tragic triumph true usurper vision woman words York