King LearPenguin UK, 2005 M04 7 - 368 pages 'The most perfect specimen of the dramatic art existing in the world' Percy Bysshe Shelley |
From inside the book
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William Shakespeare George Hunter. Contents. General Introduction The Chronology of Shakespeare's Works Introduction The Play in Performance Further Reading KING LEAR An Account of the Text Words for Music in King Lear Commentary Follow ...
William Shakespeare George Hunter. Contents. General Introduction The Chronology of Shakespeare's Works Introduction The Play in Performance Further Reading KING LEAR An Account of the Text Words for Music in King Lear Commentary Follow ...
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... Shakespeare's Comedies and Shakespeare's Universality: Here's Fine Revolution, and the editor of King Lear: Contemporary Critical Essays and Shakespeare: The Last Plays. General Introduction Every play by Shakespeare is unique. This is.
... Shakespeare's Comedies and Shakespeare's Universality: Here's Fine Revolution, and the editor of King Lear: Contemporary Critical Essays and Shakespeare: The Last Plays. General Introduction Every play by Shakespeare is unique. This is.
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... play to play, and often also within the plays themselves, that the repertory system within which he worked demanded, and which provided an invaluable stimulus to his imagination. Introductions to individual works in this series attempt ...
... play to play, and often also within the plays themselves, that the repertory system within which he worked demanded, and which provided an invaluable stimulus to his imagination. Introductions to individual works in this series attempt ...
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... plays of the early 1590s such as the tragedy of Titus Andronicus, The Comedy of Errors, and the narrative poems Venus and Adonis (1592–3) and The Rape of Lucrece (1593–4), and is still evident in his latest plays, informing the dream ...
... plays of the early 1590s such as the tragedy of Titus Andronicus, The Comedy of Errors, and the narrative poems Venus and Adonis (1592–3) and The Rape of Lucrece (1593–4), and is still evident in his latest plays, informing the dream ...
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... played more than one role in a play and additional actors were hired as needed. Led by the tragedian Richard Burbage (1568–1619) and, initially, the comic actor Will Kemp (d. 1603), they rapidly achieved a high reputation, and when King ...
... played more than one role in a play and additional actors were hired as needed. Led by the tragedian Richard Burbage (1568–1619) and, initially, the comic actor Will Kemp (d. 1603), they rapidly achieved a high reputation, and when King ...
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Common terms and phrases
actors ALBANY arms bastard beggar Burgundy Cordelia Cornwall daughters death dost Dover Dr Johnson Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Edmund Elizabethan Enter Edgar Enter Lear Exeunt Exit eyes F reading father fear feel Folio follow Fool Fool’s fortune foul fiend France GENTLEMAN give Gloucester’s gods Gonerill Gonerill and Regan grace Harsnet’s hast hath heart Henry VI honour i’the justice KENT Kent’s King Lear kingdom knave knights Lear’s letter look lord madam man’s matter means nature noble nuncle o’er o’the omitted Oswald perhaps poor Poor Tom Pray presumably prose in Q Q and F Q corrected Quarto Regan Richard III scene seems sense servant Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays sister speak speech stand storm sword tears theatrical thee There’s thine things Titus Andronicus Tom’s tragedy trumpet villain Who’s Winter’s Tale words wretches