Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Band 28Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Seite 286
... death will come cease to dis- tract us , since the readiness is all , " though I do not see why these two senses are necessarily disjunctive . I also grant that it would take an unrealistically attentive audi- ence to hear in " Let be ...
... death will come cease to dis- tract us , since the readiness is all , " though I do not see why these two senses are necessarily disjunctive . I also grant that it would take an unrealistically attentive audi- ence to hear in " Let be ...
Seite 287
... death at the smile , death in a drink , death in the metaphor of revelry , death through the jawbones , is fitted to both his crime and his concealment of it . Bradley heard the venom and wit in " union . " Hamlet kills the marriage in ...
... death at the smile , death in a drink , death in the metaphor of revelry , death through the jawbones , is fitted to both his crime and his concealment of it . Bradley heard the venom and wit in " union . " Hamlet kills the marriage in ...
Seite 317
... death of “ my lady , ” Hamlet's or Shakespeare's painted queen , be figured into a moment of mourning for a court jester ? What partial resolution of misogyny is enacted by such a complex and composite figure ? In a play where mourning ...
... death of “ my lady , ” Hamlet's or Shakespeare's painted queen , be figured into a moment of mourning for a court jester ? What partial resolution of misogyny is enacted by such a complex and composite figure ? In a play where mourning ...
Inhalt
Texts and Revels in Twelfth Night | 13 |
Lynda E Boose The Taming of the Shrew Good Husbandry and Enclosure | 21 |
Juliet Dusinberre As Who Liked It? | 31 |
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