Shakespeare's Political Plays, Volume 10 |
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Page 65
... Henry also carry complete authority . His dying pro- nouncement on Henry's failure as a king has choric status : And , Henry , hadst thou sway'd as kings should do , Or as thy father and his father did , Giving no ground unto the house ...
... Henry also carry complete authority . His dying pro- nouncement on Henry's failure as a king has choric status : And , Henry , hadst thou sway'd as kings should do , Or as thy father and his father did , Giving no ground unto the house ...
Page 67
... Henry's title was doubtful , but as long as he effectively exercised power in England he was right- fully king , and York therefore a traitor . Now that Edward has effective power , Henry has no claim to allegiance . This truth is ...
... Henry's title was doubtful , but as long as he effectively exercised power in England he was right- fully king , and York therefore a traitor . Now that Edward has effective power , Henry has no claim to allegiance . This truth is ...
Page 185
... Henry's expedition against France as the moral equivalent of his father's intended crusade . Henry's " adventure " is obviously identical to that spe- ciously justified invasion of England by the French in King John's time ; for its ...
... Henry's expedition against France as the moral equivalent of his father's intended crusade . Henry's " adventure " is obviously identical to that spe- ciously justified invasion of England by the French in King John's time ; for its ...
Contents
Introduction | 3 |
Henry VI Part One | 19 |
Henry VI Part Two | 39 |
Copyright | |
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action already Antony appears assassination audience authority banish Bastard battle blood Bolingbroke Brutus Cade Caesar Cassius character complex confrontation contrast Coriolanus crown curse death doth drama Duchess earlier Edward effective Elizabethan enemy England English established evil fact Falstaff father favor figure forces France French Gloucester Gloucester's Hal's Harfleur hath heaven Henry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's history play Hotspur innocent irony issues Jack Falstaff Joan John's judgment Julius Caesar kind King John king's kingdom Lancastrians later less Lord loyalty Macbeth Margaret Mark Antony medieval mind moral morality plays murder noble Othello Pandulph peace personality plausible play's political present Prince queen recognize reign response rhetoric Richard Richard III role Roman Rome ruthless sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean history shows soliloquy speare's speech spirit Suffolk surrender Talbot Tamburlaine tetralogy thee theme thou throne tion traitor true Tudors ultimate usurp vindication virtue York York's Yorkists