The Merry Wives of WindsorPenguin UK, 29 de set. 2005 - 256 pàgines In need of money, the fat and foolish Falstaff devises a scheme to seduce two married women and steal their husbands' wealth. By talking to each other, however, the wives soon discover his plan and begin to plot their own revenge. Relentlessly inventive, this comic humiliation of a foolish would-be seducer is a lively, compelling and ultimately joyous celebration of the all-conquering power of laughter. |
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... comes on to the stage and responds to the accusation: 'I have done all this' (109). He claims to have 'answered ... come after him may' (13–14). Wrongdoing is rife in the play. While the Fords and the Pages have households of servants ...
... comes most strongly from the carefully differentiated languages of its inhabitants. This play has more references to English as a language than any of Shakespeare's other plays, and very many of them are negative, in the sense that they ...
... comes my master, Master Shallow,' he points out, 'and another gentleman, from Frogmore, over the stile, this way' (30–32). The town of Windsor is represented on the stage through these simple but specific details of places and spaces ...
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