Henry VPenguin UK, 25 feb. 2010 - 336 pagini 'At one and the same time the greatest of all works of English patriotism and a searing critique of warfare' Jonathan Bate |
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... audiences. He is the greatest of poets, but he is essentially a dramatic poet. Though his plays have much to offer to readers, they exist fully only in performance. In these volumes we offer individual introductions, notes on language ...
... audiences. He is the greatest of poets, but he is essentially a dramatic poet. Though his plays have much to offer to readers, they exist fully only in performance. In these volumes we offer individual introductions, notes on language ...
Pagina
... audiences are subjected to competing and incompatible claims by successive speakers that put our judgement to the test. The suggestion that what distinguishes Henry V is not so much its anatomy of war as its anatomy of the power of ...
... audiences are subjected to competing and incompatible claims by successive speakers that put our judgement to the test. The suggestion that what distinguishes Henry V is not so much its anatomy of war as its anatomy of the power of ...
Pagina
... audiences one way and then another on a matter of war lies at the heart of Shakespeare's testing theatre of judgement. For much of its performance history the latter has been sacrificed in favour of a version of the former modelled on ...
... audiences one way and then another on a matter of war lies at the heart of Shakespeare's testing theatre of judgement. For much of its performance history the latter has been sacrificed in favour of a version of the former modelled on ...
Pagina
... nearby fields. There is also evidence to suggest that captains and soldiers made up a significant portion of theatre audiences during this period (see R. B. McKerrow (ed.), The Works of Thomas Nashe (1904–10), vol. 1, p. 212). All.
... nearby fields. There is also evidence to suggest that captains and soldiers made up a significant portion of theatre audiences during this period (see R. B. McKerrow (ed.), The Works of Thomas Nashe (1904–10), vol. 1, p. 212). All.
Pagina
... audiences. Continuing fears of a Spanish armada may have prompted Shakespeare's choice of a maritime metaphor when Henry recounts how, when Edward III was waging war in France, 'the Scot on his unfurnished kingdom | Came pouring, like ...
... audiences. Continuing fears of a Spanish armada may have prompted Shakespeare's choice of a maritime metaphor when Henry recounts how, when Edward III was waging war in France, 'the Scot on his unfurnished kingdom | Came pouring, like ...
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Termeni și expresii frecvente
actor Agincourt ALICE appear army audiences Bardolph base battle blood body brother Captain cause Chorus claim close CONSTABLE crown Dauphin death Duke edition Edward Elizabethan England English Enter Exeter Exeunt Exit eyes face fair father fear field FLUELLEN Folio follow forces four France French give Gower hand Harfleur Harry hath head heart Henry’s Holinshed honour horse Ireland John Katherine keep kill KING HENRY live look Lord majesty master means military never night noble offer ORLEANS performance Pistol play political poor present Prince prisoners production Quarto reading Richard royal scene sexual Shakespeare soldiers speak speech stage suggests sword tell theatre thee thou thought turn wars Welsh