Shakespeare's Roman WorldsRoutledge, 1989 - 243 sider Shows how a clear understanding of Shakespeare's explorations of Roman values offers invaluable critical insights into the Roman plays. |
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Side 14
... sword ( ' O , thy vile lady ! / She has robb'd me of my sword ' ( IV.xiv.22-3 ) ) and his final inability to despatch himself efficiently . Ironically , Mark Antony is described by Octavius as having been the embodiment of Roman virtue ...
... sword ( ' O , thy vile lady ! / She has robb'd me of my sword ' ( IV.xiv.22-3 ) ) and his final inability to despatch himself efficiently . Ironically , Mark Antony is described by Octavius as having been the embodiment of Roman virtue ...
Side 145
... sword proves inadequate to ' earn our chronicle ' ( III.xiii.175 ) it has to be sought through the transforming ... sword functions as symbol : he is stripped of it by Cleopatra when he is taken to bed drunk ; he recognizes that ...
... sword proves inadequate to ' earn our chronicle ' ( III.xiii.175 ) it has to be sought through the transforming ... sword functions as symbol : he is stripped of it by Cleopatra when he is taken to bed drunk ; he recognizes that ...
Side 146
... sword and armor , vertical dimension , and dissolution . The sword and armor Antony wears are the visible signs of his sold- iership and empire ; but as the play progresses , the power of Antony's sword is undercut by his association ...
... sword and armor , vertical dimension , and dissolution . The sword and armor Antony wears are the visible signs of his sold- iership and empire ; but as the play progresses , the power of Antony's sword is undercut by his association ...
Indhold
IMAGES AND SELFIMAGES IN JULIUS CAESAR | 40 |
REALITIES AND IMAGININGS IN ANTONY AND | 93 |
SOUNDS WORDS GESTURES AND DEEDS IN | 154 |
Copyright | |
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action Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appear assassination audience Aufidius awareness battle bicause body Brutus and Cassius Bullough Casca Cassius character Cicero cittie Cominius common conflict conspirators contempt contrast conveys Coriolanus Corioles creates critical death deeds doth Dramatic Sources dramatist Egypt Egyptian embodiment enemies Enobarbus expression Feast of Lupercal feeling friends gives hand hath heart hero honour Ibid imagery Julius Caesar kill King King Lear Lavinia Leggatt Lepidus living Mark Antony Martius Menenius mother murder Narrative and Dramatic nature never noble Octavius Caesar patricians plebeians Plutarch Plutarch's account political Pompey Pompey's powerfully response reveals revenge Roman history Roman plays Roman values Roman world Rome sayd selfe Senate sense Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Roman shewed Sicinius significant social universe society soldiers speak speech sword thee thou Titus Andronicus tongue tragedy tribunes triumph unto vision Volsces Volumnia warre warrior words wounds