King LearApplause Books, 1996 - 220 (Applause Books). These popular editions allow the reader and student to look beyond the scholarly reading text to the more sensuous, more collaborative, more malleable performance text which emerges in conjunction with the commentary and notes. Each note, each gloss, each commentary reflects the stage life of the play with constant reference to the challenge of the text in performance. Readers will not only discover an enlivened Shakespeare, they will be empowered to rehearse and direct their own productions of the imagination in the process. |
Z wnętrza książki
Wyniki 1 - 3 z 31
Strona 21
... talk quietly together in efficient prose , in which observation is followed swiftly by deduction . Their masks have dropped , and the high drama of public professions is replaced with practical and dismissive talk : their father is ...
... talk quietly together in efficient prose , in which observation is followed swiftly by deduction . Their masks have dropped , and the high drama of public professions is replaced with practical and dismissive talk : their father is ...
Strona 83
... talks of pun- ishment , ignorance and disaster in an almost flippant way . But a change overtakes him , for having ... talk of Fortune's wheel ( II.ii.166 ) has pre- pared for something of the fool's attitudes ( but not his fatalism ) ...
... talks of pun- ishment , ignorance and disaster in an almost flippant way . But a change overtakes him , for having ... talk of Fortune's wheel ( II.ii.166 ) has pre- pared for something of the fool's attitudes ( but not his fatalism ) ...
Strona 125
... talk of a " son " ( II . 11-12 ) stings Lear ; he is obsessed with his daughters , and cries out for hellish and pain- ful revenge . For him the " burning spits " are as real as the storm had been , its power no longer dis- criminating ...
... talk of a " son " ( II . 11-12 ) stings Lear ; he is obsessed with his daughters , and cries out for hellish and pain- ful revenge . For him the " burning spits " are as real as the storm had been , its power no longer dis- criminating ...
Inne wydania - Wyświetl wszystko
Kluczowe wyrazy i wyrażenia
action actor Albany answer appear arms asks attention audience authority become breaks bring character close comes Cordelia CORNWALL danger daughters death draw duke Edgar Edmund effect Enter Exit eyes face fall father fear feeling fiend follow fool fortune France further give Gloucester Gloucester's gods Goneril hand hath head hear heart hold immediately keep Kent kill king Lear Lear's leaves letter live look lord master means mind nature never night offer omits once OSWALD pain pause performance perhaps play poor probably question Regan response scene seems sense servant Shakespeare silent sister speak speech spoken stage stands storm suffering suggests talk tears tell thee thing thou thoughts tion tries true turns voice whole