Lectures on ShakespearePrinceton University Press, 08/10/2019 - 432 páginas From one of the great modern writers, the acclaimed lectures in which he draws on a lifetime of experience to take the measure of Shakespeare's plays and sonnets |
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... tells him, 'Thou art essentially mad without seeming so'” (1 Henry IV, II.iv.540–41). “Hal is the type,” Auden says, “who becomes a college president, a government head, etc., and one hates their guts.” And in “The Prince's Dog,” in an ...
... tell the story and describe the scene in other words and one would know at once that it is beautiful in the way that a dream can be beautiful.” Auden speaks of the mythic power of The Tempest in similar terms, and he says that The ...
... tells him that the common saying among men is, “Man, to thyself be true!” but that among the Trolls the saying is ... telling the truth about what he sees despite his best intentions, the Troll King tries to persuade him to have his eye ...
... tell them what I did” (3 Henry VI, I.i.16), and in the scene in which he kills Somerset, he declares, “Priests pray for enemies, but princes kill” (2 Henry VI, V.ii.71). Richard discovers the power of words when his father decides not ...
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Índice
3 | |
13 | |
The Comedy of Errors and The Two Gentlemen of Verona 23 | 23 |
Loves Labours Lost | 33 |
A Midsummer Nights Dream | 53 |
The Taming of the Shrew King John and Richard II | 63 |
Henry IV Parts One and Two and Henry V | 101 |
The Merry Wives of Windsor | 124 |
Alls Well That Ends Well | 181 |
Antony and Cleopatra | 231 |
Timon of Athens | 255 |
Pericles and Cymbeline | 270 |
Concluding Lecture | 308 |
APPENDIX I | 321 |
Fall Term Final Examination | 341 |
Audens Markings in Kittredge | 347 |