Commentary and Control in Shakespeare's Plays |
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Page 60
... lovers bring on the tragedy ; 15 and Sprague remarked that Friar Laurence was often mistaken for a Chorus : Dowden ... lovers . Friar Laurence may be said to stand out because he is on the lovers ' - and the audi- ence's - side , though ...
... lovers bring on the tragedy ; 15 and Sprague remarked that Friar Laurence was often mistaken for a Chorus : Dowden ... lovers . Friar Laurence may be said to stand out because he is on the lovers ' - and the audi- ence's - side , though ...
Page 62
... lovers become apparent to them as well as to us . By the end of Act I , fears and hopes are in the balance , after comedy scenes tinged with danger . We hope we need not take Romeo's ' Beauty too rich for use , for earth too dear ...
... lovers become apparent to them as well as to us . By the end of Act I , fears and hopes are in the balance , after comedy scenes tinged with danger . We hope we need not take Romeo's ' Beauty too rich for use , for earth too dear ...
Page 82
... lovers who have fled to the wood , and Puck's anointing of the wrong pair of eyes , a sense of Oberon's power and control remains to prevent one from fearing that any of the characters will come to real grief . We have similar fun to ...
... lovers who have fled to the wood , and Puck's anointing of the wrong pair of eyes , a sense of Oberon's power and control remains to prevent one from fearing that any of the characters will come to real grief . We have similar fun to ...
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Common terms and phrases
action aesthetic Alfred Harbage All's Antony and Cleopatra Apemantus Arden argues artist attitude Berowne Bertram Bilton Bolingbroke Brutus choric chorus Claudio comedy comic commentary Coriolanus critical death discusses dramatic authority dramatist Duke E. K. Chambers Elizabethan emotional Enobarbus evil experience Falstaff Faulconbridge feel Feste final Fool Friar Laurence gives Hamlet hear Helena Henry hero honour Iago illusion interpretation irony Jaques John Russell Brown judgement Julius Caesar L. C. Knights Lear's London lovers Macbeth main characters Marcus Measure for Measure Midsummer Night's Dream moral Muriel Bradbrook nature Othello Pericles play's plot political Prince 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