YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Rewriting Shakespeare
Essays 1261 - 1290
he would have to address. This information provides him with a foundational understanding of the various kingdoms and allows him t...
for himself - with a kiss. Her husband retorts, "Sir, would she give you so much of her lips / As of her tongue she oft bestows o...
tongue slow to respond is more than fear, it is also rage (line 3). This rage is so intense that it weakens his heart, that is, hi...
he received from those closest to him, emphasizing his own over-inflated sense of importance and intellect. His overbearing natur...
fortune / Or to take arms against a sea of troubles, / And by opposing end them. To die- to sleep- / No more; and by a sleep to...
"Id plan and work revenge with her" (line 102). With the gods approval, Electra and Orestes set out to avenge their fathers murde...
between Richard and the audience so as to establish an immediate intimacy. He "remains in direct contact with the spectators thro...
demesne" (Keats PG). It is here that religion first crops up in Keats explanation. Further, the entire work is about discovery, op...
famous "To be or not to be" soliloquy, followed by a talk with Ophelia. In the same act Ophelia says "My lord, I have remembrances...
do him wrong. She is all but banished and ends up marrying into wealth and power in another region of the continent. Still she sid...
he is out of the country when Bolingbroke returns with an invading army. In Act II, scene 3, Bolingbroke and York, his uncle, di...
took the time to teach him a "proper" language, and not the "gabble" that he spoke when she and her father first arrived. Caliba...
identity. It is interesting to note that as he pulls on his "cloak of madness" that his true intellect becomes completely clouded ...
romantic experience and worldly sophistication, he easily falls victim to his insecurities. He is a proud man and anything that t...
worst" (Shakespeare II ii). As such she is highly berated by all that know her, save her sister perhaps. She is ridiculed and seen...
the scenes involving the witches are accompanied by loud claps of thunder. Staging Macbeth outdoors gave Shakespeare natural soun...
daughter, Miranda; his faithful fairy, Ariel; and his loyal Councilor (advisor), Gonzalo. But also living there is a lifelong nat...
inasmuch as social interaction implies interacting with other persons; thus, the meaning of that interaction is always to be a joi...
again. This time, however, Bassanio urges Antonio to loan it one more time while Bassanio will bring the latter hazard back again...
of Lady Macbeth. Some have termed her cold and calculating, others have said that she was mad, and terribly ambitious. It would ap...
the result of the action he has taken and that such "psychic" revenge is having a far more powerful impact on him than any possibl...
that I have longed long to re-deliver. I pray you, now receive them" (Shakespeare 145). He replies: "No, no; I never gave you augh...
speaks so eloquently that the Duke comments that Othellos tale would "win my daughter too" (Act I, Scene 3, line 171). Furthermore...
in ego-stroking, and Lears youngest daughter, Cordelia, will have none of it. She tells her father quite simply, "I love your Maj...
they marry or not, for there have been no grandiose expectations placed upon them to act a certain way. Benedick remarks, "That a...
receive our duties, and our duties / Are to your throne and state, children and servants, / Which do but what they should, by doin...
plot progresses, Richard allows things to develop till there is virtual defiance of his royal will. This intolerable situation o...
observer, the forest is depicted as a pastoral or golden world not unlike the biblical garden of Eden in two particular scenes, in...
/ And every fair from fair sometimes declines, / By chance, or natures changing course untrimmd; / But thy eternal summer shall no...
appropriate, her husband will have "half" her "care and duty" (I.i.104). Her response enrages Lear and he sees her reasoned respon...