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Page 99
... speech intentionally composed in the turgid style of the bad melodramas of the day ( though with- out the buffoonery in which Shakespeare indulged in the Dream ) : he does it with so much passion that he forgets the wise advice given ...
... speech intentionally composed in the turgid style of the bad melodramas of the day ( though with- out the buffoonery in which Shakespeare indulged in the Dream ) : he does it with so much passion that he forgets the wise advice given ...
Page 164
... speech of Queen Margaret- ' expert in curses ' , as Queen Elizabeth calls her - is the perfection of this proud , haughty , nostalgic and strictly balanced style in which , under the almost impersonal character of the traditional themes ...
... speech of Queen Margaret- ' expert in curses ' , as Queen Elizabeth calls her - is the perfection of this proud , haughty , nostalgic and strictly balanced style in which , under the almost impersonal character of the traditional themes ...
Page 173
... speech where the emotional tension lies behind the humour , since Ulysses's serious words conceal a provocative ... speech.1 The rhetoric of the three parts of Henry VI is still a formal rhetoric which employs tropes appropriate to the ...
... speech where the emotional tension lies behind the humour , since Ulysses's serious words conceal a provocative ... speech.1 The rhetoric of the three parts of Henry VI is still a formal rhetoric which employs tropes appropriate to the ...
Contents
PART TWO TECHNIQUE | 77 |
THE CHARACTERS | 129 |
PART THREE THE THEMES | 187 |
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Common terms and phrases
action ambition Antony Antony and Cleopatra attitude beauty bethan blood characters classical Cleopatra comedy complete conventions Coriolanus Cressida crime critical death despair destiny disorder dramatist Duchess of Malfi effects emotion English evil experience expression faith fate fear feeling French ghosts give Hamlet hatred heart Henry hero honour human images imagination irony Jacobean King Lear L. C. Knights Lady Macbeth language logic lyrical Machiavelli madness Marlowe Marlowe's meaning Measure for Measure merely metaphor metaphysical mind moral murder nature night Othello passion personages pity play plot poet poetic poetry political Prince problem realism reality reason revenge rhetoric rhythm Richard Richard III romantic scene Seneca Shakespeare soul speech spirit stage style supreme symbolical T. S. Eliot takes Tamburlaine theatre themes thought Timon Timon of Athens tion tone tragedy tragic triumph Troilus Troilus and Cressida unity universe verse virtue whole Wilson Knight words