The Works of Shakespeare: Macbeth, 1947At the University Press, 1955 |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 71
Página xlix
... play , which , while stealing lavishly from Shakespeare , omitted all the comic scenes , and added a sub - plot which turned the play into a sentimental drama of love and intrigue . The first performance of Shakespeare's Henry V , if ...
... play , which , while stealing lavishly from Shakespeare , omitted all the comic scenes , and added a sub - plot which turned the play into a sentimental drama of love and intrigue . The first performance of Shakespeare's Henry V , if ...
Página liii
... play with a poetic inaugural address by Robert Buchanan , and a Prologue to the play proper , consisting of the scenes between the King and Prince Hal , and the Prince and the Chief Justice from Henry IV , Part II . In this Prologue ...
... play with a poetic inaugural address by Robert Buchanan , and a Prologue to the play proper , consisting of the scenes between the King and Prince Hal , and the Prince and the Chief Justice from Henry IV , Part II . In this Prologue ...
Página liv
... play by Ben Greet's Company under William Poel's direction with Elizabethan staging . The entire text was given without cuts , and with but one interval , on a bare stage hung with tapestries , a gallery running across the back . In the ...
... play by Ben Greet's Company under William Poel's direction with Elizabethan staging . The entire text was given without cuts , and with but one interval , on a bare stage hung with tapestries , a gallery running across the back . In the ...
Contenido
KING HENRY V FRONTISPIECE | vii |
THE STAGEHISTORY OF HENRY V | xlviii |
TO THE READER | lvii |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
Agincourt Alarum Alice Archbishop audience Bardolph battle battle of Agincourt behold blood Bourbon brother Burgundy Camb Canterbury Captain Chorus Constable Constable of France Covent Garden crown Dauphin death doth Duke Duke of Burgundy Duthie England English Enter Erpingham Exeter eyes fair Falstaff Fluellen follows France French King French Soldier Gesta give Gloucester glove Gower grace Greg hand Harfleur Harry hath heart Henry IV Henry of Monmouth Henry's herald Holinshed honour horse Hostess humour Introd Kate Katharine King Henry king's knight leek liege look lord Macmorris majesty Montjoy never noble numbers Orleans Pistol play Pope princes prob Prol Prologue prose ransom Rowe ruined band Salic Salic Law scene Scroop Shakespeare speak speech Steev sword tell Theatre thee Theo thou unto Warwick Westmoreland Williams words Wylie