William Shakespeare: In His Times, for Our TimesRedwords, 2004 - 95 pàgines After the success of the first four Revolutionary Portraits, this book by Mike Rosen is a beautiful addition to the series, which sparkles with the dynamism and humour that both children and adult readers have come to love. An illustrated volume that would make a perfect gift. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 17.
Pàgina 7
... goes , leaving his bas- tard son Edmund to step forward . ( We already know of Edmund that he is plotting to get his father Gloucester to give him the ancestral land by disowning the legitimate son , Edgar . ) Edmund mocks his father's ...
... goes , leaving his bas- tard son Edmund to step forward . ( We already know of Edmund that he is plotting to get his father Gloucester to give him the ancestral land by disowning the legitimate son , Edgar . ) Edmund mocks his father's ...
Pàgina 27
... goes along with this even when Juliet threatens suicide . In some ways it's a disgusting picture of the self - importance and authoritar- ianism of the rich . In others it shows what their attitude is to the individual's right to ...
... goes along with this even when Juliet threatens suicide . In some ways it's a disgusting picture of the self - importance and authoritar- ianism of the rich . In others it shows what their attitude is to the individual's right to ...
Pàgina 45
... go back to King Lear , the play I mentioned in the introduction . Listening to radio phone - ins and reading the tabloids , it's not long before we come across the phrase ' human nature ' , or ' it's only natural ' . There is , in a way ...
... go back to King Lear , the play I mentioned in the introduction . Listening to radio phone - ins and reading the tabloids , it's not long before we come across the phrase ' human nature ' , or ' it's only natural ' . There is , in a way ...
Continguts
CONTENTS | 7 |
ONE Romeo Juliet and 20 cooks | 15 |
TWO Cutting of throats | 29 |
No s’hi han mostrat 3 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
action argument aristocrat audience base become Belch brother Caliban called Capulet characters claimed comes consequences course daughters death debate drama Elizabethan England English example fact father feel give goes going govern Hamlet hand hear human ideas interested involved it's kill kind king King Lear land Lear legitimate lives London look marriage marry matter means Measure meet middle class mind monarch nature Night offers Olivia opening outlook particular person play pleasure plotting political poor Puritans reasons rich Roman Romeo and Juliet ruled ruler scene seems seen sense servants Shakespeare Shakespeare's plays shows social society someone speech stars struggle taking talk theatre things thou tion trying Twelfth watching wealth What's women workers writers