Unconformities in Shakespeare’s History PlaysPalgrave Macmillan UK, 1982 M07 8 - 207 pages |
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Page 17
... complete integration , leading some critics to the backward conclusion that complete integration was not aimed at . But the architecture is there to justify the intentions . It is an architecture which is primarily to be seen in the ...
... complete integration , leading some critics to the backward conclusion that complete integration was not aimed at . But the architecture is there to justify the intentions . It is an architecture which is primarily to be seen in the ...
Page 87
... complete military collapse , and of Aumerle's involvement in the conspiracy of the Abbot of Westminster . There is evidence of different phases of composition in signs of dis- turbance which can hardly be accounted for otherwise . Thus ...
... complete military collapse , and of Aumerle's involvement in the conspiracy of the Abbot of Westminster . There is evidence of different phases of composition in signs of dis- turbance which can hardly be accounted for otherwise . Thus ...
Page 131
... complete agreement with the main body of the play . In the first place there is no regular corres- pondence between the ordering of the choruses and the Folio act divisions , but this bit of editing may have been bungled by Jaggard or ...
... complete agreement with the main body of the play . In the first place there is no regular corres- pondence between the ordering of the choruses and the Folio act divisions , but this bit of editing may have been bungled by Jaggard or ...
Contents
The Whole Contention One Play into | 19 |
Treachery and Dissension Two Plays into | 38 |
Plots and Prophecies | 59 |
Copyright | |
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action actually already Anne appearance Arden Bastard battle becomes beginning Bolingbroke brother Buckingham called cause character Clarence comes complete concerned Contention continued course critics crown curse Dauphin death direction doubt Duke early Edward Elizabeth Elizabethan England English expectations explain fact Falstaff final France French gives Gloucester hand Harry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's history plays Holinshed important indicate intentions interesting introduced John Justice King Henry King John king's later least lines look Lord Margaret matter mentioned murder natural never obviously once opening original perhaps person planned plot political present prince probably Queen reason reference remains Richard Richard II says scene seems sense Shakespeare soliloquy sources speaks speech stage structure suggested Talbot tells theme turn victory Warwick whole Wilson York