The Meaning of Shakespeare, Volume 1, Volume 1University of Chicago Press, Feb 15, 2009 - 408 pages In two magnificent and authoritative volumes, Harold C. Goddard takes readers on a tour through the works of William Shakespeare, celebrating his incomparable plays and unsurpassed literary genius. |
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Page 2
... telling them . They are as rugged and lovely a pair of boys as the mountains they live among , both of them ... tell The war - like feats I have done , his spirits fly out Into my story : say , " Thus mine enemy fell , And thus ...
... telling them . They are as rugged and lovely a pair of boys as the mountains they live among , both of them ... tell The war - like feats I have done , his spirits fly out Into my story : say , " Thus mine enemy fell , And thus ...
Page 5
... telling us to be true to Shakespeare . We should be , but not in their way . No one can be true to Shakespeare until he has first been true to himself . And the greatest actors , like the greatest critics , have been Cadwals . A good ...
... telling us to be true to Shakespeare . We should be , but not in their way . No one can be true to Shakespeare until he has first been true to himself . And the greatest actors , like the greatest critics , have been Cadwals . A good ...
Page 10
... tell whether it is its spirit or your own that is speaking . Look into a pool of water . There are the sky and the trees . But there , too , is your face at the center — however spiritualized . Call to the rocks and hills . Is it your ...
... tell whether it is its spirit or your own that is speaking . Look into a pool of water . There are the sky and the trees . But there , too , is your face at the center — however spiritualized . Call to the rocks and hills . Is it your ...
Page 13
... tell what you see in the blots and unconsciously you expose your innermost self . The psychologist need not have taken all that trouble . The supreme imaginative literature of the world is a survival of the fittest ink blots of the ages ...
... tell what you see in the blots and unconsciously you expose your innermost self . The psychologist need not have taken all that trouble . The supreme imaginative literature of the world is a survival of the fittest ink blots of the ages ...
Page 38
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Contents
1 | |
15 | |
25 | |
28 | |
V Titus Andronicus | 33 |
VI Richard III | 35 |
VII The Two Gentlemen of Verona | 41 |
VIII Loves Labours Lost | 48 |
XIV King John | 140 |
XV Richard II | 148 |
XVI Henry IV Part 1 Henry IV Part II The Merry Wives of Windsor | 161 |
XVII Henry V | 215 |
XVIII Henry VIII | 269 |
XIX Much Ado about Nothing | 271 |
XX As You Like It | 281 |
XXI Twelfth Night | 294 |
IX The PoetPlaywright | 55 |
X The Taming of the Shrew | 68 |
XI A MidsummerNights Dream | 74 |
XII The Merchant of Venice | 81 |
XIII Romeo and Juliet | 117 |
XXII Julius Caesar | 307 |
XXIII Hamlet | 331 |
Index | 387 |
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Common terms and phrases
Antonio Bassanio battle beginning blood Brutus called Capulet casket Cassius character Comedy Comedy of Errors comes cries critics crown dead death devil disguise doth dramatic Duke eyes fact Falstaff father fear fool genius Gentlemen of Verona Ghost give Hamlet hath heart heaven Henry Henry IV Henry VI Henry's hero honor Hotspur imagination Julius Caesar Justice kill King Lear King's Laertes lines lord lover Merchant of Venice Mercutio mercy metaphor Midsummer-Night's Dream mind moral mother murder nature never night peace play poet poetry Polonius Portia Prince revenge Richard Richard II Romeo and Juliet Rosalind says scene seems sense Shake Shakespeare Shylock soul speak speech spirit story sweet symbol tell theater theatrical thee theme things thou thought throne Touchstone tragedy true truth turns Twelfth Night Tybalt unconscious utter words youth