Shakespeare's Roman Plays: The Function of Imagery in the DramaNo detailed description available for "Shakespeare's Roman Plays". |
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Page 85
... says : " I am the man / Will give thee all the world " ( 2.7.70–71 ) . Notice how deliberately Menas accents " world " at the end of his sentences ; it is the magical word of the scene . But the tipsy Pompey can only ask : " Hast thou ...
... says : " I am the man / Will give thee all the world " ( 2.7.70–71 ) . Notice how deliberately Menas accents " world " at the end of his sentences ; it is the magical word of the scene . But the tipsy Pompey can only ask : " Hast thou ...
Page 151
... says that the wolf loves the lamb " to devour him , as the hungry plebeians would the noble Marcius " ( 2.1.10-11 ) , and he observes satirically that the Tribunes ' justice goes awry " if you chance to be pinch'd with the cholic ...
... says that the wolf loves the lamb " to devour him , as the hungry plebeians would the noble Marcius " ( 2.1.10-11 ) , and he observes satirically that the Tribunes ' justice goes awry " if you chance to be pinch'd with the cholic ...
Page 237
... says that Marcius " entred the cittie with very fewe men to helpe him ... " ( Shakespeare's Roman Plays , p . 572 ) . 23. Reynolds says of Heywood's II Iron Age that " the gate to the city seems one of the side doors " ( The 237 IMAGERY ...
... says that Marcius " entred the cittie with very fewe men to helpe him ... " ( Shakespeare's Roman Plays , p . 572 ) . 23. Reynolds says of Heywood's II Iron Age that " the gate to the city seems one of the side doors " ( The 237 IMAGERY ...
Contents
STYLE IN THE ROMAN PLAYS II | 11 |
THE IMAGERY OF JULIUS CAESAR | 41 |
THE IMAGERY OF ANTONY AND CLEOPATRA | 79 |
Copyright | |
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Shakespeare's Roman Plays: The Function of Imagery in the Drama Maurice Charney No preview available - 1961 |
Common terms and phrases
A. C. Bradley Actium analogy Antony and Cleopatra Antony's audience Aufidius battle blood Brutus Cambridge Casca Cassius character Charmian Cleo Cominius conflict conspiracy conspirators contrast Corio Coriolanus costume death dramatic E. K. Chambers effect Egypt Egyptian Elizabethan Elizabethan stage Enobarbus Eros example figure final fire Folio reading food imagery gods gown of humility Granville-Barker Hamlet heart hyperbole I,ii III,i Julius Caesar Kittredge L. C. Knights lanus Leo reprint lines Marcius means Menenius moral murder of Caesar nature noble North's Plutarch Octavius oration patra patricians perhaps plebeians poetic Pompey present queen role Rome says scene seems sense serpent Shake Shakespeare Survey Shakespeare's Imagery Shakespeare's play Shakespeare's Roman Plays similes sleep soldier soliloquy speaks speare's speech stage action storm style suggests suicide sword symbolic theater thee thou tion tone tragedy tragic Tribunes V,iii Variorum verbal Volscians Volumnia William Shakespeare words