Shakespeare's Political Plays, Volume 10 |
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Page 58
... brother Edward IV's foolish marriage with Lady Grey , Richard answers his brother's plea for approval with cant- ing compliment that scarcely masks his contempt for the new queen and her uxorious husband : No , God forbid that I should ...
... brother Edward IV's foolish marriage with Lady Grey , Richard answers his brother's plea for approval with cant- ing compliment that scarcely masks his contempt for the new queen and her uxorious husband : No , God forbid that I should ...
Page 73
... brothers both . ( V.vii.26-7 ) For the moral cost of victory has already appeared power- fully in Richard's soliloquy ... brother ; And this word " love , " which greybeards call divine , Be resident in men like one another And not in me ...
... brothers both . ( V.vii.26-7 ) For the moral cost of victory has already appeared power- fully in Richard's soliloquy ... brother ; And this word " love , " which greybeards call divine , Be resident in men like one another And not in me ...
Page 87
... brother's death is one of the most memorable speeches of the play : Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death And shall the same give pardon to a slave ? My brother slew no man ; his fault was thought , And yet his punishment was cruel ...
... brother's death is one of the most memorable speeches of the play : Have I a tongue to doom my brother's death And shall the same give pardon to a slave ? My brother slew no man ; his fault was thought , And yet his punishment was cruel ...
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Common terms and phrases
action Antony appears assassination audience authority banish Bastard battle blood Bolingbroke brother Brutus Cade Cassius censured character Clarence complex confrontation contrast Coriolanus crown death defeat doth drama earlier Edward effective Elizabethan enemy England English established evil fact Falstaff father Faulconbridge favor fear figure forces France French Gloucester Gloucester's Hal's Harfleur hath heaven Henry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's history play Hotspur irony Joan John's judgment Julius Caesar kind King John king's Lancastrians later Lear less Lord loyalty Margaret medieval mind moral morality plays murder noble opening scene Othello Pandulph peace personality plausible play's political Prince queen recognizes reign response rhetoric Richard Richard III role Roman Rome ruthless sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespearean history shows soliloquy speare's speech spirit succession Suffolk surrender Talbot Tamburlaine tetralogy thee theme thou throne tion tragedy traitors true Tudors ultimate victory vindicated virtue Warwick York York's Yorkists