Shakespearean Criticism, Band 52Michelle Lee, Kathy D. Darrow Gale Research International, Limited, 2000 - 420 Seiten Annotation For a convenient introduction to Shakespearean topics, plays and poems, start with this authoritative resource. Beginning with Volume 27, this illustrated series focuses on criticism published after 1960 and provides the reader with a thematic approach to Shakespeare's works. An introduction, criticism, annotated bibliography and cumulative index to topics help users organize their research, making diligent inquiry quick and easy. The series also offers an annual compilation of essays that represent the year's most noteworthy contributions to Shakespearean scholarship. |
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... Hath borne his faculties so meek , hath been So clear in his great office , that his virtues Will plead like angels , trumpet - tongued against The deep damnation of his taking - off . ( I. vii . 16-20 ) Yet " clear " as Duncan has been ...
... Hath borne his faculties so meek , hath been So clear in his great office , that his virtues Will plead like angels , trumpet - tongued against The deep damnation of his taking - off . ( I. vii . 16-20 ) Yet " clear " as Duncan has been ...
Seite 82
... hath no friends but what are friends for fear " ( 5.2.19-20 ) . And before that , Oxford points out , " Ev- ery ... hath said or done ; it is commonly called knowledge ; but for a man to be certen what hee himselfe hath done or ...
... hath no friends but what are friends for fear " ( 5.2.19-20 ) . And before that , Oxford points out , " Ev- ery ... hath said or done ; it is commonly called knowledge ; but for a man to be certen what hee himselfe hath done or ...
Seite 290
... hath long been mad , and scarr'd herself ( V.5.23 ) . Richmond's rhetoric in the play's concluding speech , couched in the form of a prayer , emphasises the end of la- ments and curses as the necessary rhetorical modes of op- position ...
... hath long been mad , and scarr'd herself ( V.5.23 ) . Richmond's rhetoric in the play's concluding speech , couched in the form of a prayer , emphasises the end of la- ments and curses as the necessary rhetorical modes of op- position ...
Inhalt
Morality in Shakespeares Works | 1 |
Richard II | 107 |
Richard III | 195 |
Urheberrecht | |
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