William Shakespeare's Richard IIHarold Bloom Chelsea House Publishers, 1988 - 139 pàgines A collection of seven critical essays on Shakespeare's tragedy, arranged in chronological order of original publication. |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 14.
Pàgina 49
... verbal gestures . With the notable and rhetorically meaningful exception of Gaunt , everyone in scene 1 is inclined to invert his syntax , to stretch it , and to take any opportunity for forcing parentheses between subjects and verbs ...
... verbal gestures . With the notable and rhetorically meaningful exception of Gaunt , everyone in scene 1 is inclined to invert his syntax , to stretch it , and to take any opportunity for forcing parentheses between subjects and verbs ...
Pàgina 64
... verbal career similar to the one I earlier gave of Richard's . Richard and Gaunt are compared and contrasted from the first moments of the play , and the point of comparison is the verbal characteristics of the two . The visual ...
... verbal career similar to the one I earlier gave of Richard's . Richard and Gaunt are compared and contrasted from the first moments of the play , and the point of comparison is the verbal characteristics of the two . The visual ...
Pàgina 76
... verbal experience can be seen to reflect issues of paramount interest to the poet - playwright . Indeed , Richard has often been called a poet - king , not because he speaks excellent verse — as the " unpoetic " Bolingbroke does also ...
... verbal experience can be seen to reflect issues of paramount interest to the poet - playwright . Indeed , Richard has often been called a poet - king , not because he speaks excellent verse — as the " unpoetic " Bolingbroke does also ...
Continguts
This Royal Throne Unkinged | 37 |
Variations on the Fall | 67 |
The Typical Register in Shakespeares Richard II | 101 |
Copyright | |
No s’hi han mostrat 1 seccions
Frases i termes més freqüents
accused action actor audience Aumerle Aumerle's banish base court becomes blood Bolingbroke Bolingbroke and Mowbray ceremonial challenge character couplet criticism crown death deposed divine dramatic Duchess Duke earth Elizabethan England epithet eyes fall Falstaff farewell father Flint Castle frustrated God's grief Harry Berger hath Henriad Henry Henry IV Herford History Plays imagination John of Gaunt king's kingship language later Lear lines Lord's anointed Macbeth meaning Metadrama metaphor mimesis mimetic mirror Mowbray's murder nature Northrop Frye Northumberland peace periodic sentence peripeteia person phrase play's political Pomfret Castle present Prince question relations representation response rhetorical Richard II ritual role royal throne says scene sense sentence Shakespeare Shakespeare's Richard son's speak speech Stephen Booth structure sweet symbolic syntactic syntax theatrical thee theme things thou thoughts tion tongue tragedy tragic treason trial by combat typical register usurpation verb verbal words York