The Poetry of Shakespeare's Plays, Volume 10 |
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Page 38
... sometimes in the form of dramatic irony , as when the mad Lear says to the blind Gloucester , ' Your eyes are in a heavy case , your purse in a light ' . Another form of imagery characteristic of the early and lyrical plays is ...
... sometimes in the form of dramatic irony , as when the mad Lear says to the blind Gloucester , ' Your eyes are in a heavy case , your purse in a light ' . Another form of imagery characteristic of the early and lyrical plays is ...
Page 60
... sometimes gaily , sometimes elegiacally employed , is beyond the range of Marlowe's achievement , and is as unmistakably Shake- spearean as the verse of Hamlet . Then , it is in the least poetical of these early plays , 3 Henry VI ...
... sometimes gaily , sometimes elegiacally employed , is beyond the range of Marlowe's achievement , and is as unmistakably Shake- spearean as the verse of Hamlet . Then , it is in the least poetical of these early plays , 3 Henry VI ...
Page 93
... Sometimes it is merely a compression of phrase , bent of love , respective lenity , but sometimes Juliet , the most direct speaker of them all , weaves closer the texture of a whole passage : Therefore , out of thy long - experienced ...
... Sometimes it is merely a compression of phrase , bent of love , respective lenity , but sometimes Juliet , the most direct speaker of them all , weaves closer the texture of a whole passage : Therefore , out of thy long - experienced ...
Contents
Chapter Page | vii |
EARLY PLAYS AND POEMS | 53 |
SONNETS AND LYRICAL PLAYS | 74 |
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Common terms and phrases
action alliteration Antony and Cleopatra assonance assonantal audience beauty blank verse character characteristic Comedy of Errors conceit Coriolanus Cymbeline death developed diction doth dramatic poetry dramatist early plays element emotions example eyes Falstaff feminine ending Fletcher Hamlet hand harmonized hath heart Henry VI Henry VIII heroines histories Iago iambic illustrates imagery Julius Cæsar King John language Lear Love's Labour's Lost Lucrece lyrical plays Macbeth medium Merchant of Venice metaphor middle nature never Othello passage perfection Pericles period phrase poem poet Prince prose quibble redundant syllable rhetorical rhyme rhythm Richard Richard II romantic comedies Romeo and Juliet scarcely scene sequence Shake Shakespeare similar Sonnets sound speaks speare speare's speech stage strange Stratford style sweet Tempest theatre thee theme things thou Timon tragedies tragic hero trochaic trochees Twelfth Night Venus and Adonis Viola vowels Winter's Tale words writing written wrote