Unconformities in Shakespeare’s History PlaysPalgrave Macmillan UK, 1982 M07 8 - 207 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 34
Page 42
... signing of a peace treaty leaving the English finally victorious . There is a conventionally natural ending in York's last lines in v.iv : So , now dismiss your army when ye please ; 42 Unconformities in Shakespeare's History Plays.
... signing of a peace treaty leaving the English finally victorious . There is a conventionally natural ending in York's last lines in v.iv : So , now dismiss your army when ye please ; 42 Unconformities in Shakespeare's History Plays.
Page 112
... natural to see them as belonging to the company which he refuses for very shame to march through Coventry and who ... naturally explained as expansions and extensions for use in Part II . There is a fault in the recruiting scene at the ...
... natural to see them as belonging to the company which he refuses for very shame to march through Coventry and who ... naturally explained as expansions and extensions for use in Part II . There is a fault in the recruiting scene at the ...
Page 179
... naturally , of himself . 15. The repetition looks like a memorial error in Q copied by F , which was here set from Q3 . The lines perhaps more naturally belong to Anne than to Clarence , since she once , in the first wooing scene ...
... naturally , of himself . 15. The repetition looks like a memorial error in Q copied by F , which was here set from Q3 . The lines perhaps more naturally belong to Anne than to Clarence , since she once , in the first wooing scene ...
Contents
The Whole Contention One Play into | 19 |
Treachery and Dissension Two Plays into | 38 |
Plots and Prophecies | 59 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
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