Shakespearean Criticism: Excerpts from the Criticism of William Shakespeare's Plays and Poetry, from the First Published Appraisals to Current Evaluations, Volume 63Gale Research Company, 1984 |
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Page 342
... letter , which he gives to Rosina , Felismena's maid . The letter will prove the turning point in their relationship , though its importance is difficult to gauge by Felismena's frosty demeanor when Rosina produces the letter . Instead ...
... letter , which he gives to Rosina , Felismena's maid . The letter will prove the turning point in their relationship , though its importance is difficult to gauge by Felismena's frosty demeanor when Rosina produces the letter . Instead ...
Page 343
... letter . In the scene following Julia's receipt of the letter , Shake- speare again embellishes what he found in Montemayor . Shaping his material for the theater , the playwright employs another letter , this one without precedent in ...
... letter . In the scene following Julia's receipt of the letter , Shake- speare again embellishes what he found in Montemayor . Shaping his material for the theater , the playwright employs another letter , this one without precedent in ...
Page 346
... letter to your ladyship . ( IV.iv. 121-24 ) Almost certainly the first letter is one that Proteus had written earlier to Julia , perhaps even the letter destroyed and then reconstructed in the play's second scene . " Seeing this letter ...
... letter to your ladyship . ( IV.iv. 121-24 ) Almost certainly the first letter is one that Proteus had written earlier to Julia , perhaps even the letter destroyed and then reconstructed in the play's second scene . " Seeing this letter ...
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action actors All's Antony Antony's audience becomes bed-trick Bertram blood Brutus Brutus's Cade Cade's Cassius ceremony characters claim comedy comic conspirators Coriolanus Countess critics death desire Diana dramatic Duke Edward Elizabethan England English Epicurean essay father female feminine French gender Gentlemen of Verona Gloucester Helena Henry Henry VI Henry's heroic honor husband irony Jack Cade Joan Joan's Julia Julius Caesar King King's Lafew language Lavatch letter London lord male Mannerist Margaret marriage masculine means moral murder nature noble oath Parolles play play's plebeians plot Plutarch political Portia problem Problem Comedies Proteus Queen reading Renaissance rhetoric Richard Richard III ritual role Roman Rome says scene seems sexual Shake Shakespeare Silvia social soliloquy speak speare speare's speech spirit stage Suffolk suggests Talbot Tamburlaine theater theatrical thee thou Thurio tion tragedy unnatural Valentine virginity virtue Warwick wife woman women words York Yorkist