Essays on Shakespeare: In Honour of A.A. AnsariTika Ram Sharma Shalabh Book House, 1986 - 302 pages Festschrift honoring Asloob Ahmad Ansari, b. 1925, professor of English, Aligarh Muslim University. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 22
Page 180
... soliloquy to provide even more reassurance ; but the speech I have just quoted is a clear signal to a sensitive audience that , despite appearances to the con- trary , Hal is a loving son . As he did in Part I , Shakespeare tends to ...
... soliloquy to provide even more reassurance ; but the speech I have just quoted is a clear signal to a sensitive audience that , despite appearances to the con- trary , Hal is a loving son . As he did in Part I , Shakespeare tends to ...
Page 189
... soliloquy is a series of rationalizations which is designed to justify , to glorify , and to reassure himself.12 The political cleverness of his plan is essential to its psychologi- cal value , for it makes Hal feel that he is modeling ...
... soliloquy is a series of rationalizations which is designed to justify , to glorify , and to reassure himself.12 The political cleverness of his plan is essential to its psychologi- cal value , for it makes Hal feel that he is modeling ...
Page 227
... soliloquy at the end of the scene gives us some sort of clue : she says she thinks highly of Troilus , some- thing she will not admit to Pandarus If Shakespeare had adopted his usual technique here , the soliloquy would have preceded ...
... soliloquy at the end of the scene gives us some sort of clue : she says she thinks highly of Troilus , some- thing she will not admit to Pandarus If Shakespeare had adopted his usual technique here , the soliloquy would have preceded ...
Contents
PREFACE Editor vii | 1 |
LEO SALINGAR Shakespeare and the Italian | 8 |
TOBIN Shakespeare Bacon Milton | 29 |
Copyright | |
14 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
Actaeon action answer Antonio appearance audience authority become begins bring called cause character comedy comes course critics crown death Dowden effect Elizabethan English English Studies example experience expression fact Falstaff father fear feeling figure final follows force gives Hal's Hamlet hand heart Henry human idea interest interpretation justice Katherina kind King later Lear less lines lives London look Lord lovers marriage means mind moral movement nature never night opening Othello painting perhaps play poetry political position possible present Prince question reality reduction references rejection rhetoric Richard role romantic scene seeks seems sense Shakespeare Shylock soliloquy speak speech stage Studies suggests tells theme thing thou thought Titus tragedy tragic truth turn University whole young