Antony and CleopatraOxford University Press, 2002 - 170 sider This exclusive collection of the Bard's works has been designed specifically for readers new to Shakespeare's rich literary legacy. Each of the plays is presented unabridged and in large print, copiously annotated and preceded by a character summary and commentary. Brief scene synopses clarify confusing plots, while incisive essays describe the historical context and Shakespeare's sources. The explanatory notes are written clearly and simply, illustrated, and positioned right next to the text -- no more flipping pages back and forth to squint over microscopic footnotes! Topics for further discussion, critical comments, related essays, and a chronology of Shakespeare's life and work are included among the appendices to each volume. The books boast fine black-and-white photographs of stagings of the plays at Shakespeare Festivals around the globe. From the wide margins and big print to the extent of explanatory notes -- the full text of each play is presented in the clearest and most accessible format available. |
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Side iii
... Plutarch Shakespeare's Verse vii ix xi xiii ➢ ་ ཋ ཝ ཨ ་ ཋ ་ བྷྲ ཎི ༞ བྷྲ རྞེ ཏྭཱ xl xliii xlv Source , Date , and Text Characters in the Play xlvi Antony and Cleopatra I Plutarch 143 Enobarbus : a twentieth - century view 147 What the ...
... Plutarch Shakespeare's Verse vii ix xi xiii ➢ ་ ཋ ཝ ཨ ་ ཋ ་ བྷྲ ཎི ༞ བྷྲ རྞེ ཏྭཱ xl xliii xlv Source , Date , and Text Characters in the Play xlvi Antony and Cleopatra I Plutarch 143 Enobarbus : a twentieth - century view 147 What the ...
Side v
... Plutarch , his biographer , made note of this— though he was not impressed by it and commented that ' it was full of ostentation , foolish bravery , and vain ambition ' ! But this flamboyant exhibitionism met its match in Cleopatra . On ...
... Plutarch , his biographer , made note of this— though he was not impressed by it and commented that ' it was full of ostentation , foolish bravery , and vain ambition ' ! But this flamboyant exhibitionism met its match in Cleopatra . On ...
Side vi
... Plutarch's disapproval is evident , but it cannot overm his admiration and even affection for the stars of his ' 1 Shakespeare also seems to have been star - struck , respondin Antony's ' Asiatic ' speech by creating a style for his ...
... Plutarch's disapproval is evident , but it cannot overm his admiration and even affection for the stars of his ' 1 Shakespeare also seems to have been star - struck , respondin Antony's ' Asiatic ' speech by creating a style for his ...
Side xi
... Plutarch , ' It was predestined that the government of all the world should fall into Octavius Caesar's hands ' . Octavius had been adopted and named as heir by his great- uncle , Julius Caesar , and he shares the government of the ...
... Plutarch , ' It was predestined that the government of all the world should fall into Octavius Caesar's hands ' . Octavius had been adopted and named as heir by his great- uncle , Julius Caesar , and he shares the government of the ...
Side xii
... Plutarch : ' Dom Aenobarbus ' had fought alongside Antony in Parthia and married one of his daughters ; but it was another ' Domitius ' deserted Antony . It is possible that the name ' Aenobarb meaning ' the red - bearded one ' - was ...
... Plutarch : ' Dom Aenobarbus ' had fought alongside Antony in Parthia and married one of his daughters ; but it was another ' Domitius ' deserted Antony . It is possible that the name ' Aenobarb meaning ' the red - bearded one ' - was ...
Innhold
I | 1 |
III | 3 |
IV | 11 |
V | 16 |
VI | 19 |
VII | 23 |
IX | 25 |
X | 34 |
XXV | 76 |
XXVI | 79 |
XXVII | 82 |
XXVIII | 83 |
XXIX | 93 |
XXXI | 94 |
XXXII | 96 |
XXXIII | 98 |
XI | 36 |
XII | 37 |
XIII | 42 |
XIV | 48 |
XV | 55 |
XVII | 57 |
XVIII | 61 |
XIX | 63 |
XX | 65 |
XXI | 66 |
XXII | 70 |
XXIII | 75 |
XXXIV | 100 |
XXXV | 101 |
XXXVI | 102 |
XXXVII | 104 |
XXXVIII | 106 |
XXXIX | 107 |
XL | 108 |
XLI | 111 |
XLII | 112 |
XLIII | 123 |
XLV | 126 |
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Act 4 Scene Actium Agrippa Alexandria Alexas Antony and Cleopatra Antony Cleopatra Antony's audience battle battle of Actium brother Caesar and Antony Caesarion Canidius characters Charmian Cleopatra Antony dead death Dercetus Diomedes Dolabella drink Egypt Egyptian Enobarbus Enter Antony enter Cleopatra Eros Eros Antony eunuch Events in history Exeunt Act Exit eyes Farewell fight follow fortune friends Fulvia give gods Guard hand hath hear heart honour horse i'th Iras Julius Caesar kings leave Lepidus live look lord madam Maecenas Marcus Crassus Mardian Mark Antony married Menas Messenger Cleopatra never noble o'th Octavia Octavius Caesar Parthia peace play Plutarch Pompey Pompey's pray Proculeius queen Roman Rome Scarus Scene 13 Seleucus Servant Sextus Pompeius Shakespeare Soldier Soothsayer speak stage sword tell thee There's Thidias thine thou hast thought triumph triumvirs trumpets Ventidius whilst wife woman words