Unconformities in Shakespeare’s History Plays |
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Page 6
... speech in a bitter and cynical mood . The two speeches occur in a continuous sequence , interrupted and divided only by a few lines spoken by Lovell and Vaux . But clearly they were not written with the same picture of Buckingham and ...
... speech in a bitter and cynical mood . The two speeches occur in a continuous sequence , interrupted and divided only by a few lines spoken by Lovell and Vaux . But clearly they were not written with the same picture of Buckingham and ...
Page 29
... speeches , however , personifications abound though there are not always distinct personal correlatives . Gloucester's last long speech in III.i is a good example , and especially significant in that it returns to the theatrical ...
... speeches , however , personifications abound though there are not always distinct personal correlatives . Gloucester's last long speech in III.i is a good example , and especially significant in that it returns to the theatrical ...
Page 132
... speech is preceded by a message that ' The English are embattail'd , you French peers ' , and by the Constable's immediate order , ' To horse , you gallant princes ! straight to horse ! ' He concludes his speech of twenty - three lines ...
... speech is preceded by a message that ' The English are embattail'd , you French peers ' , and by the Constable's immediate order , ' To horse , you gallant princes ! straight to horse ! ' He concludes his speech of twenty - three lines ...
Contents
The Whole Contention One Play into Two | 19 |
Treachery and Dissension Two Plays into One | 38 |
Plots and Prophecies The Tragedy of King Richard the Third | 53 |
Copyright | |
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action Agincourt Anne appearance Arden audience Aumerle Bardolph Bastard battle battle of Towton beginning Bolingbroke brother Buckingham Bullough character chorus chronicles Clarence conflict crown curse Dauphin death Dover Wilson dramatic dramatist Duke of York E. M. W. Tillyard Edward Elizabeth Elizabethan England English History Play expectations Falstaff Folio France French Gaunt Gloucester Gloucester's Hal's Harry hath Henry IV plays Henry VI plays Henry VIII Henry's Holinshed Hotspur house of York inconsistent Justice Katherine King Henry King John King Richard king's lines Lord Margaret messenger Mortimer Mowbray murder Northumberland obviously opening scene Penguin perhaps plot political prince probably quarto Queen revenge Ribner Richard II Richmond Rossiter Salisbury says seems Shakespeare Shakespeare's History Plays Shakespeare's plays Shrewsbury soliloquy Somerset speaks speech stage structure Suffolk Talbot play tetralogy theme Tillyard Troublesome Raigne True Tragedy Tudor myth victory Warwick Wolsey words York's Yorkist