Histories, Vol. 2: Volume 2; Introduction by Tony TannerKnopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 1994 - 778 էջ William Shakespeare arrived at his splendid maturity as an artist in his second cycle of history plays. With their superb battle scenes; their magnificent major and minor characters; their stories of ambition, usurpation, guilt, and redemption; and their profound ideas about the social order, these plays represent the Elizabethan historical drama in its full glory. And thanks to parts one and two of Henry IV our literature is graced—in the figure of the dissolute and boastful knight Sir John Falstaff—with one of the greatest comic creations in the history of the stage. |
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Արդյունքներ 81–ի 1-ից 3-ը:
... England by the discontented nobles ( ' requiring him with all convenient speed to convey himself into England , promising him all their aid , power , and assistance , if he , expelling King Richard , as a man not meet for the office he ...
... England depicted in Henry IV ... is neither ideally ordered nor happy . It is an England , on the one side , of bawdy house and thieves ' kitchen , of waylaid merchants , badgered and bewildered Justices , and a peasantry wretched ...
... England . Fortune made his sword ; By which , the world's best garden he achieved ; And of it left his son imperial lord . Henry the Sixth , in infant bands crowned King Of France and England , did this king succeed ; Whose state so ...
Բովանդակություն
Introduction | xi |
Select Bibliography | cxxiii |
HENRY IV PART ONE | 113 |
Հեղինակային իրավունք | |
4 այլ բաժինները չեն ցուցադրվում