Commentary and Control in Shakespeare's Plays |
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Page 46
... words about him , no doubt to reassure the audience , too : some of the comments precede the soliloquy in which he explains himself . Thus Tranio feels impelled to say at the wedding ' He hath some meaning in his mad attire ' ( III ...
... words about him , no doubt to reassure the audience , too : some of the comments precede the soliloquy in which he explains himself . Thus Tranio feels impelled to say at the wedding ' He hath some meaning in his mad attire ' ( III ...
Page 99
... word . As the plot is hatched , Feste falls silent - no close involvement for him — and Fabian later takes his place ... words . Viola re- cognizes his shrewdness ( and Feste , I suspect , knows why the youth has no beard ) : ' For folly ...
... word . As the plot is hatched , Feste falls silent - no close involvement for him — and Fabian later takes his place ... words . Viola re- cognizes his shrewdness ( and Feste , I suspect , knows why the youth has no beard ) : ' For folly ...
Page 186
... word and deed and attitude , or help to keep it in check by reminding us of other worlds than the hero's private one . Thus ... words and emotions . In the histories , one may feel that the effort is sustained through a sequence of plays ...
... word and deed and attitude , or help to keep it in check by reminding us of other worlds than the hero's private one . Thus ... words and emotions . In the histories , one may feel that the effort is sustained through a sequence of plays ...
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Common terms and phrases
action aesthetic All's Antony and Cleopatra Apemantus argues artist attitude audience sympathies Berowne Bertram Bilton Bolingbroke Brutus choric chorus Claudio comic Coriolanus critical death discusses dramatic authority dramatist dream Duke E. K. Chambers Elizabethan emotional Enobarbus evil experience Falstaff Faulconbridge feel Feste final Flavius Fool Friar Laurence gives Hamlet hear Helena Henry hero honour Iago illusion Imogen interpretation irony Jaques John judgement Julius Caesar King L. C. Knights Lear Lear's Leontes lovers Macbeth main characters Marcus Measure for Measure mind moral Muriel Bradbrook nature Othello Pericles play's plot political Prince Problem Plays Prospero response Richard Richard III role romance Romeo and Juliet Rosalind satirical says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearian Shylock speaks spectator speech stage structure theme Thersites thou Tillyard Timon of Athens Titus Andronicus Touchstone tragedy tragic Troilus and Cressida Wilson Knight words