G-spot 发表于 2025-3-25 05:25:18
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spirot is not difficult to see how the plays might come to resemble, say, a royal function, such as a Coronation, a social ritual by means of which a meaning is established. Such rituals show what they do. His treatment of the moment in the last act of . when Portia tells Antonio that three of his ‘argosGraves’-disease 发表于 2025-3-25 09:35:04
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truct their dramatic worlds out of particular images of court society, evidently participated in both the ‘historical’ and the ‘symbolic’ realities of the court, and can be discussed in relation to either. But as we have shown in our detailed analyses of particular plays, the Shakespearean drama doe使害怕 发表于 2025-3-25 23:29:59
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spirofore Hamlet speaks (in I. 2) we are expected to wonder why he alone wears black and behaves so oddly; after he has soliloquised several times we wonder (with Hamlet) why his stated motives and actions fail to tally; and throughout the play one passing remark after another challenges us to spot the m追逐 发表于 2025-3-26 03:09:22
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spirofore Hamlet speaks (in I. 2) we are expected to wonder why he alone wears black and behaves so oddly; after he has soliloquised several times we wonder (with Hamlet) why his stated motives and actions fail to tally; and throughout the play one passing remark after another challenges us to spot the m哑剧 发表于 2025-3-26 05:27:55
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spiroen before Hamlet speaks (in I. 2) we are expected to wonder why he alone wears black and behaves so oddly; after he has soliloquised several times we wonder (with Hamlet) why his stated motives and actions fail to tally; and throughout the play one passing remark after another challenges us to spotVOC 发表于 2025-3-26 08:49:42
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spiroen before Hamlet speaks (in I. 2) we are expected to wonder why he alone wears black and behaves so oddly; after he has soliloquised several times we wonder (with Hamlet) why his stated motives and actions fail to tally; and throughout the play one passing remark after another challenges us to spot不适 发表于 2025-3-26 13:59:20
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spiroalready king of Scotland, and in 1603 England and Scotland were distinct nations — and remained so, despite his strenuous efforts to unite them, until 1707. Before travelling from Edinburgh to London after Elizabeth’s death, James had never been to England, and about their new king his English subjeEncephalitis 发表于 2025-3-26 17:38:38
Arthur J. Naparstek,David E. Biegel,Herzl R. Spirols (particularly in London) jostled to assert their control over playhouses, players, and those who made up their audiences. That manoeuvring was one manifestation of a fundamental struggle under way in early modern Engand regarding the nature, the location, and the scope of ultimate authority — pol