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Page xviii
... truths are told.” The quotation, from Macbeth, belongs above Shakespeare's lintel. His truths--in Macbeth good and ill, fair and foul--bristle with difference but are inseparably twinned. discriminating one from the other is a problem ...
... truths are told.” The quotation, from Macbeth, belongs above Shakespeare's lintel. His truths--in Macbeth good and ill, fair and foul--bristle with difference but are inseparably twinned. discriminating one from the other is a problem ...
Page xxiii
... truths are told,” and only a partial view will say that Macbeth is fooled, leaving it at that. A self-conscious hero, he understands the wickedness, also the folly, of what he intends, and as the play's first act concludes he weighs ...
... truths are told,” and only a partial view will say that Macbeth is fooled, leaving it at that. A self-conscious hero, he understands the wickedness, also the folly, of what he intends, and as the play's first act concludes he weighs ...
Page 5
... Truth, also a gigantic rose tree, growing evidently from Henry Tudor, Lancastrian, and his consort Elizabeth of York. Truth in the pageant, not produced from a hat, emerges in the ripened time — "when golden time convents" or summons ...
... Truth, also a gigantic rose tree, growing evidently from Henry Tudor, Lancastrian, and his consort Elizabeth of York. Truth in the pageant, not produced from a hat, emerges in the ripened time — "when golden time convents" or summons ...
Page 8
... truth, died for opinion's sake or knocked their heads against the universe, like his contemporary Marlowe. Shakespeare, having surrogates and not prone to complaining, kept his opinions to himself. He had reason. The matrix that ...
... truth, died for opinion's sake or knocked their heads against the universe, like his contemporary Marlowe. Shakespeare, having surrogates and not prone to complaining, kept his opinions to himself. He had reason. The matrix that ...
Page 47
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Contents
1 | |
25 | |
Shadows of Himself | 79 |
WildGoose Chase | 107 |
A Motley to the View | 136 |
For Ted and Lloyd St Antoine | 155 |
The Dyers Hand | 163 |
Index | 195 |
Sailing to Illyria 65 | 65 |
Fools of Nature 101 | 101 |
PR2894 F65 2007 | 106 |
Treason in the Blood 134 | 134 |
The Wine of Life 160 | 160 |
Bravest at the Last 188 | 188 |
Unpathed Waters Undreamed Shores | 217 |
Journeys End | 247 |
Includes bibliographical references and index | 1 |
The Revolution of the Times 34 | 34 |
Index | 281 |
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Common terms and phrases
actors bear beginning better blood called characters church comedy comes Court dark death died Earl early England English fall father fields followed gave gives Greene ground Hamlet hand head heart Henry hero hopeful isn't John Jonson King knew land later leaves less lived London looks Lord lost master means meant mind moral nature needed never Night once perhaps play playwright poem poet Queen readers reason remembered Richard says scene seems Shake Shakespeare shows side sometimes sonnets speare speare's stage stands story Stratford Street suggests tells theater things thinks Thomas thought took tragedy true truth turned wanted wrote young