Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... character, Falstaff, inhabits the history plays and Henry V ends with a marriage, while Henry VI, Part III, Richard II and Richard III culminate in the tragic deaths of their protagonists. Although in performance Shakespeare's characters ...
... characters – Romeo and Juliet, Falstaff, Shylock and Hamlet – have acquired mythic status. He is valued for his humanity, his psychological insight, his wit and humour, his lyricism, his mastery of language, his ability to excite ...
... characters onstage. Shakespeare's pedantic friend and rival Ben Jonson mocked him for having written in a later scene, 'Caesar did never wrong but with just cause'. The line appears in the published text as 'Know, Caesar doth not wrong ...
... characters. Before any live performance there is always an atmosphere of pleasurable anticipation among the assembled playgoers, which reaches its height as the actors come onstage and begin the play. But the first thing to be said in ...
... character and irrelevant to the action, but all too apparent in 1599. For Cassius, the absolute undesirability of monarchy is defined in terms of an extreme state of affairs which, in contrast, was a present reality for the Protestant ...