KING LEAR1963 |
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Page xv
... characters can descend from the stage through a trap or traps into the cellar or "hell." Sometimes this space beneath the platform accommodates a sound-effects man or musician (in Antony and Cleopatra "music of the hautboys is under the ...
... characters can descend from the stage through a trap or traps into the cellar or "hell." Sometimes this space beneath the platform accommodates a sound-effects man or musician (in Antony and Cleopatra "music of the hautboys is under the ...
Page xviii
... characters, but the editor was not able (or willing) to present all of the succeeding texts so fully dressed. Later texts occasionally show signs of carelessness: in one scene of Much Ado About Nothing the names of actors, instead of ...
... characters, but the editor was not able (or willing) to present all of the succeeding texts so fully dressed. Later texts occasionally show signs of carelessness: in one scene of Much Ado About Nothing the names of actors, instead of ...
Page xxviii
... characters themselves move in an air of unreality. There is about them a felt sense of disjunction, as between what they are and what they seem to be. Lear is not a king but the show of a king. It is an insubstantial pageant over which ...
... characters themselves move in an air of unreality. There is about them a felt sense of disjunction, as between what they are and what they seem to be. Lear is not a king but the show of a king. It is an insubstantial pageant over which ...
Contents
Prefatory Remarks | vii |
Introduction i | xxii |
The Tragedy of King Lear | 39 |
Copyright | |
5 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
A. C. Bradley Alack Albany arms better blind brother Burgundy characters Cordelia Cornwall daugh daughters death dost doth Dover dramatic Duke Duke of Cornwall Edmund Enter Edgar Enter Gloucester Enter Lear evil Exeunt eyes F omits F prints fall father feel Folio follow Fool fortune France Gentleman give Gloster Gloucester's gods Goneril grace hast hath hear heart heavens hendiadys honor justice Kent King Lear knave lady Lear's Leir look lord Macbeth madam master Messenger mind Mirror for Magistrates nature never night noble Nuncle Oswald Othello Paphlagonia passion Perillus pity play poor pray Prithee Q corrected Quarto Raphael Holinshed Regan s.d. Enter s.d. Exit Scena Scene seems Servant Shake Shakespeare sister speak stage storm tell theater thee there's thine thing thou art tion tragedy traitor trumpet unto villain William Shakespeare words wretch