Commentary and Control in Shakespeare's Plays |
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Page 41
... provides ' a basis for the ethical responses of the audience without anyone insisting on the point ' . * Social ... provide the implicit judgements . To define this as ' choric ' is to provide a net in which we can catch anyone , even ...
... provides ' a basis for the ethical responses of the audience without anyone insisting on the point ' . * Social ... provide the implicit judgements . To define this as ' choric ' is to provide a net in which we can catch anyone , even ...
Page 54
... providing a built - in spectator or controller of the action , in keeping with generic requirements of harmless fun . This provides enjoyable dramatic irony , and assurance that no one will come to grief , but I am not so sure that it ...
... providing a built - in spectator or controller of the action , in keeping with generic requirements of harmless fun . This provides enjoyable dramatic irony , and assurance that no one will come to grief , but I am not so sure that it ...
Page 118
... provides a pause , in scene 5 with Hecate and the witches ( if one accepts it ) , and in scene 6 , which presents in the brilliant irony of Lennox the indirec- tions by which people must find each other out under the new equivocating ...
... provides a pause , in scene 5 with Hecate and the witches ( if one accepts it ) , and in scene 6 , which presents in the brilliant irony of Lennox the indirec- tions by which people must find each other out under the new equivocating ...
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Common terms and phrases
accept action agree Antony appears argues attitude audience authority becomes beginning Bertram bring calls characters close comedy comes comic commentary completely concern conclusion Coriolanus critical death discusses dramatic Dream Duke early effect Elizabethan emotional evil experience feel figure final follow Fool Friar gives Hamlet hand hear Henry hero hopes human idea important interpretation issues John keep King Knight Lear leave lines London look Macbeth meaning Measure mind moral move nature never perhaps play play's plot political present problem Prospero provides question reason relation response Richard says scene seems seen sense Shakespeare shows speaks spectator speech stage story structure Studies suggests sympathy theme things thought Timon Titus tragedy tragic Troilus and Cressida turn values watch writes York