The Works of Shakespeare, Volumen10Macmillan and Company, limited, 1904 |
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Página 4
... SCENE : Partly in England , and partly in France . DURATION OF TIME I. Dramatic Time . - The time actually represented on the stage is eight days , with intervals . II . Historic Time . - The historic period represented is from the ...
... SCENE : Partly in England , and partly in France . DURATION OF TIME I. Dramatic Time . - The time actually represented on the stage is eight days , with intervals . II . Historic Time . - The historic period represented is from the ...
Página 8
... scene rather anti- cipates the magnificent battle - poetry of Henry V .; but the exuberance of its ringing rhymes proclaims even more loudly the lyric poet . Marlowe alone , among Shakespeare's contemporaries , could have written the ...
... scene rather anti- cipates the magnificent battle - poetry of Henry V .; but the exuberance of its ringing rhymes proclaims even more loudly the lyric poet . Marlowe alone , among Shakespeare's contemporaries , could have written the ...
Página 10
... scene in Iden's garden ( 2 H. iv . 10. ) it is clearly necessary that Cade should appear and describe his position before Iden enters ; but in the Contention it opens with Iden's reflections . So , in v . 1. 194 , Warwick's ' You were ...
... scene in Iden's garden ( 2 H. iv . 10. ) it is clearly necessary that Cade should appear and describe his position before Iden enters ; but in the Contention it opens with Iden's reflections . So , in v . 1. 194 , Warwick's ' You were ...
Página 11
... scene arrangement may be due to the different construction of the stage used by Lord Pembroke's men , the players of the Contention . Thus , in 2 H iii . 2. 148 , the bed on which lies the murdered body of Gloucester is ' put forth ...
... scene arrangement may be due to the different construction of the stage used by Lord Pembroke's men , the players of the Contention . Thus , in 2 H iii . 2. 148 , the bed on which lies the murdered body of Gloucester is ' put forth ...
Página 14
William Shakespeare. of the most Shakespearean passages in H. Thus the Cade scene in 2 H. iv . 2 is such a foretaste of the popular scenes in Julius Cæsar and Coriolanus as nothing else in the English drama up to 1592 remotely approaches ...
William Shakespeare. of the most Shakespearean passages in H. Thus the Cade scene in 2 H. iv . 2 is such a foretaste of the popular scenes in Julius Cæsar and Coriolanus as nothing else in the English drama up to 1592 remotely approaches ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alarum Anne arms blood brother Buck Buckingham Cade canst Catesby Clar Clarence Clif Clifford crown curse dead death dost doth Duch Duke of Gloucester Duke of York Earl Edward Eliz England Enter KING Exeunt Exit eyes farewell father fear fight France friends gentle give Glou Gloucester grace gracious Grey hand hath hear heart heaven Henry VI Henry's Holinshed honour house of Lancaster house of York Humphrey Jack Cade Julius Cæsar King Henry live London Lord Hastings lord protector madam majesty Margaret Murd murder ne'er never noble peace Plantagenet prince protector PUCELLE queen Reignier Rich Richard Richard Plantagenet Richmond Salisbury SCENE Shakespeare shame soldiers Somerset soul sovereign speak Suffolk sweet sword Talbot tell thee thine thou art thou hast thou shalt Tower traitor uncle unto Warwick wilt words