Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 58Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Page 4
... Pompey . Antony speaks to Enobarbus about him at length , and then to Cleopatra too . Caesar also speaks of Pompey , far away in Rome , but when Caesar talks about him and the danger he poses , the Roman leader tends to comment in Tudor ...
... Pompey . Antony speaks to Enobarbus about him at length , and then to Cleopatra too . Caesar also speaks of Pompey , far away in Rome , but when Caesar talks about him and the danger he poses , the Roman leader tends to comment in Tudor ...
Page 80
... Pompey's verbal attack on the triumvirate . Pompey denigrates his enemies by opposing the mercantile and political present ( Antony , Caesar , and Lepidus are “ sena- tors " and " factors " ; Julius Caesar's ghost saw them “ labor- ing ...
... Pompey's verbal attack on the triumvirate . Pompey denigrates his enemies by opposing the mercantile and political present ( Antony , Caesar , and Lepidus are “ sena- tors " and " factors " ; Julius Caesar's ghost saw them “ labor- ing ...
Page 93
... Pompey ; made his will , and read it To public ear : Spoke scantly of me : when perforce he could not But pay me terms of honour , cold and sickly He vented them . ( III.iv.3-8 ff . ) Since Antony receives this news while he is still in ...
... Pompey ; made his will , and read it To public ear : Spoke scantly of me : when perforce he could not But pay me terms of honour , cold and sickly He vented them . ( III.iv.3-8 ff . ) Since Antony receives this news while he is still in ...
Contents
A Midsummer Nights Dream | 150 |
Richard II | 229 |
The Two Noble Kinsmen | 321 |
Copyright | |
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action Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Arcite's argues audience become body Bolingbroke Bottom Caesar changeling characters Chaucer Cleo comedy comic critics crown death Demetrius desire diegesis discourse Dolabella dramatic Egypt Egyptian Elizabethan emblem Emilia England English Enobarbus erotic essay fairy female final Fortune friendship Gaunt hath Helena Henry Hercules Hermia Hippolyta human interpretation Jacobean king king's Knight's Tale language London lovers Lysander male marriage Mars means medieval metaphor Midsummer Night's Dream mimetic narrative nature Noble Kinsmen Oberon Octavius Palamon and Arcite paradox passion patra Pirithous play play's Plutarch political Pompey Proculeius queen relationship Renaissance rhetoric Richard Richard II role Roman Rome royal same-sex says scene seems sense sexual Shake Shakespeare speak speare's speech stage story suggests symbol thee Theseus Theseus's Thidias things thou tion Titania tradition tragedy tragic treason University Press Venus virtue waste woman women words York