Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 30Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Seite 71
... audience ) like him . His use in this regard is of crucial importance to the play when , in Act IV , scene vi , a messenger brings the news that Coriolanus is leading an army against Rome . To the extent that Rome allusively stood for ...
... audience ) like him . His use in this regard is of crucial importance to the play when , in Act IV , scene vi , a messenger brings the news that Coriolanus is leading an army against Rome . To the extent that Rome allusively stood for ...
Seite 221
... audience . Though the Chorus fulfills several functions as narrator - apologizing for the limitations of the theater , explaining lapses of time and shifts in locale , creating atmosphere - its most important func- tion is to evoke an ...
... audience . Though the Chorus fulfills several functions as narrator - apologizing for the limitations of the theater , explaining lapses of time and shifts in locale , creating atmosphere - its most important func- tion is to evoke an ...
Seite 317
... audience . There was , so far as we know , no ortho- dox Elizabethan view of Caesar and the conspiracy against him ; in the Republican Eternal City , Shakes- peare was free to consider political power itself . In the opening of the play ...
... audience . There was , so far as we know , no ortho- dox Elizabethan view of Caesar and the conspiracy against him ; in the Republican Eternal City , Shakes- peare was free to consider political power itself . In the opening of the play ...
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action Agincourt Antony and Cleopatra Antony's audience Aufidius battle blood Brutus Brutus's Caius Cassius ceremony character Chorus citizens comedy comic Cominius conspirators Coriola Coriolanus Coriolanus's critics crown death dramatic Elizabethan England English epic essay date Essex fact Falstaff feel Fluellen France French friends give Hal's Harfleur Harry Henry Henry IV plays Henry VI Henry's hero history plays honour human ical ideal imagination Julius Caesar kill kind king king's language Macbeth Mark Antony Martius means Menenius mind moral mother murder nature noble Octavius patricians peare peare's Pistol play's plebeians Plutarch political Pompey Prince Renaissance Reprinted by permission rhetoric Richard Richard II role Roman Rome scene seems sense Shakes Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays social soldiers soliloquy speak speech spirit stage suggest suicide sword theater things thou tion tragedy tragic tribunes Tudor virtue voice Volscians Volumnia words