Shakespeare's Early TragediesMethuen, 1968 - 214 Seiten Shakespeare's Early Tragedies contains studies of six plays: Titus Andronicus, Richard III, Romeo and Juliet, Richard II, Julius Caesar and Hamlet. The emphasis is on the variety of the plays, and the themes, a variety which has been too often obscured by the belief in a single 'tragic experience'. The kind of experience the plays create and their quality as dramatic works for the stage are also examined. These essays develop an understanding of Shakespeare's use of the stage picture in relation to the emblematic imagery of Elizabethan poetry. |
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Seite 64
... Clarence is easily led towards his dream of drowning , the first of Richard's victims , no longer the ' clouds that lour'd upon our house ' but now the members of that house itself being ' In the deep bosom of the ocean buried ' . The ...
... Clarence is easily led towards his dream of drowning , the first of Richard's victims , no longer the ' clouds that lour'd upon our house ' but now the members of that house itself being ' In the deep bosom of the ocean buried ' . The ...
Seite 65
... Clarence's belief ) a new idea ( it is suggested in the Homilies ) , but Richard makes us aware of it in its most unpleasant aspect . The ultimate irony in these lines , however , is no longer even accessible to Richard , but only to ...
... Clarence's belief ) a new idea ( it is suggested in the Homilies ) , but Richard makes us aware of it in its most unpleasant aspect . The ultimate irony in these lines , however , is no longer even accessible to Richard , but only to ...
Seite 75
... Clarence's death : Mark'd you not How that the guilty kindred of the Queen Look'd pale when they did hear of Clarence ' death ? O , they did urge it still unto the King ! God will revenge it . ( 134-8 ) Since this is said to Buckingham ...
... Clarence's death : Mark'd you not How that the guilty kindred of the Queen Look'd pale when they did hear of Clarence ' death ? O , they did urge it still unto the King ! God will revenge it . ( 134-8 ) Since this is said to Buckingham ...
Inhalt
page | 13 |
1593? | 48 |
Romeo and Juliet 1595 | 80 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Aaron action ambivalence Antony audience beast becomes blank verse blood Bolingbroke Brutus Cassius character choric Clarence Clarence's Claudius climax comedy comic conscience contrast course criticism curse death divine doth Dover Wilson dramatic dream earlier plays echoes Elizabethan emblem emblematic emerges established experience fact Faerie Queene father figure final formal ghost Hamlet hath heaven and hell Henry heroic Horatio human irony judgement Julius Caesar kind king Laertes later plays Lavinia Lucius Lucrece Marcus Margaret Mercutio mode murder nature night nobility noble obvious Ophelia pattern play's poetic poetry political Polonius prose Queen Queen Mab question Rape of Lucrece revenge rhetorical Richard Richard II ritual Roman Rome Romeo and Juliet Saturninus scene seems sense sequence Shakespeare significance simple soliloquy Spanish Tragedy speech splendour stage storm stress structure suggested Tamora thee theme thing thou tion Titus Andronicus tone tragedy tragic utterance words
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Shakespeare's Political Drama: The History Plays and the Roman Plays Alexander Leggatt Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1989 |