The Second Part of King Henry IVCambridge University Press, 3 maj 2007 The New Cambridge Shakespeare appeals to students worldwide for its up-to-date scholarship and emphasis on performance. The series features line-by-line commentaries and textual notes on the plays and poems. Introductions are regularly refreshed with accounts of new critical, stage and screen interpretations. This second edition retains Giorgio Melchiori's text of Shakespeare's The Second Part of King Henry IV. Melchiori argues that the play forms an unplanned sequel to the First Part, itself a 'remake' of an old, non-Shakespearean play. In the Second Part, Shakespeare deliberately exploits Falstaff's popular appeal and the resulting rich humour adds a comic dimension to the play, rendering it a unique blend of history, morality play and comedy. Among modern editions, Melchiori's is the one most firmly based on the quarto. This second edition includes a new section by Adam Hansen on recent stage, film and critical interpretations. |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 5 z 39
Strona
... omission from the first issue of the quarto (known as Qa) of a whole scene — 3.1, the night musings of the king — which was promptly restored in the second issue of the same (Qb). Besides, eight more passages of some length, present in ...
... omission from the first issue of the quarto (known as Qa) of a whole scene — 3.1, the night musings of the king — which was promptly restored in the second issue of the same (Qb). Besides, eight more passages of some length, present in ...
Strona
... omissions and partial restorations, but the presence in it of a greater number of what have been called by Kristian ... omission of Act 3, Scene I from the first issue of the quarto may well be a case of inadvertency on the printer's ...
... omissions and partial restorations, but the presence in it of a greater number of what have been called by Kristian ... omission of Act 3, Scene I from the first issue of the quarto may well be a case of inadvertency on the printer's ...
Strona
... omitted in the rewriting, but later introduced in Part Two as 3.1. This explains the first of the unconforrnities listed above. The king's illness was also discussed by the prince with Pointz and Rossill in a scene which ended with the ...
... omitted in the rewriting, but later introduced in Part Two as 3.1. This explains the first of the unconforrnities listed above. The king's illness was also discussed by the prince with Pointz and Rossill in a scene which ended with the ...
Strona
... omissions in the text of the 1600 quarto are from speeches pronounced by the rebels — Morton, Lord Bardolph, the Archbishop, Lady Percy, and Mowbray (two passages in Westmoreland's speeches in 4.1 are omitted because.
... omissions in the text of the 1600 quarto are from speeches pronounced by the rebels — Morton, Lord Bardolph, the Archbishop, Lady Percy, and Mowbray (two passages in Westmoreland's speeches in 4.1 are omitted because.
Strona
William Shakespeare Giorgio Melchiori. (two passages in Westmoreland's speeches in 4.1 are omitted because they are addressed to Mowbray). The omissions seem intended to weaken the case so eloquently put by the rebels. Again, the ...
William Shakespeare Giorgio Melchiori. (two passages in Westmoreland's speeches in 4.1 are omitted because they are addressed to Mowbray). The omissions seem intended to weaken the case so eloquently put by the rebels. Again, the ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
actors and’t ARCHBISHOP Bardolfe battle of Shrewsbury Bullingbrook Capell characters CLARENCE Colevile comedy crown Davy death Doll Tearsheet doth earle earle marshall edited editors Elizabethan England Enter Epilogue Exeunt Exit Famous Victories father Folio foul papers Gaultree God’s grace Hal’s hand Harry HASTINGS hath haue Heauen F Henry the Fourth Holinshed Holinshed’s honour HOSTESS humours Iohn Iudge Justice Shallow King Henry king’s knight Lord Bardolph Lord Chief Justice Master Shallow Melchiori merry Morton Mouldy Mowbray noble Northumberland notes for Act Oldcastle omission passages peace Peto Pistol play’s POINS political pray prince’s Private Idaho prose Proverbial Tilley quarto Richard Richard II scene sick Silence Sir John Falstaff Sir John Oldcastle sonne speak speech headings STAFF stage subst suggests Theatre thee there’s Thomas thou art ur-Henry verse vnto vpon Walter Hodges WARWICK Westmoreland William Shakespeare words