King LearInsight Publications, 2011 - 224 Seiten Even the most resolutely disengaged students can finally 'discover' and thrill to the rhythms and passions of Shakespeare's plays! Award-winning teachers and Shakespearean scholars have extensively trialled their approach to teaching Shakespeare's plays in the classroom, and this series is the result! The plays in this series are becoming increasingly popular for student resources in schools as English and Drama teachers discover their fabulous teaching and learning qualities. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 74
Seite iv
... Cordelia in command 140 145 151 Scene 4 Regan, Oswald and the message 154 Scene 5 Gloucester survives to meet Lear 157 Scene 6 The reconciliation 171 Act 5 178 Scene 1 A battle lost but the promise of a champion 178 Scene 2 Gloucester ...
... Cordelia in command 140 145 151 Scene 4 Regan, Oswald and the message 154 Scene 5 Gloucester survives to meet Lear 157 Scene 6 The reconciliation 171 Act 5 178 Scene 1 A battle lost but the promise of a champion 178 Scene 2 Gloucester ...
Seite 7
Aidan Coleman, Stephen McInerney, William Shakespeare. Today's play is King Lear . It costs just a penny to enter . This is about a tenth of the ... Cordelia , Regan and Gonerill , are played by boys whose voices have not yet ... King Lear 7.
Aidan Coleman, Stephen McInerney, William Shakespeare. Today's play is King Lear . It costs just a penny to enter . This is about a tenth of the ... Cordelia , Regan and Gonerill , are played by boys whose voices have not yet ... King Lear 7.
Seite 8
... king of France and upon his death is succeeded by his faithful daughter Cordelia (known by various similar names, such as Cordella). Departing from its predecessors, Shakespeare's ending – in which both Cordelia and Lear die – would ...
... king of France and upon his death is succeeded by his faithful daughter Cordelia (known by various similar names, such as Cordella). Departing from its predecessors, Shakespeare's ending – in which both Cordelia and Lear die – would ...
Seite 12
... King Lear comes in the heartbreaking speech Lear makes following the death of Cordelia ( Act 5 Scene 3 ) . The speech includes a line of trochaic pentameter ( the capitalised letters indicate the stressed beats in the following passage ) ...
... King Lear comes in the heartbreaking speech Lear makes following the death of Cordelia ( Act 5 Scene 3 ) . The speech includes a line of trochaic pentameter ( the capitalised letters indicate the stressed beats in the following passage ) ...
Seite 15
... Lear's dramatic opening speech in verse. Another example, also from Act 1 Scene 1, is the shift to prose after the love-test has ended and Cordelia has departed. The last words in verse, spoken by the noble France – 'Come, my fair Cordelia ...
... Lear's dramatic opening speech in verse. Another example, also from Act 1 Scene 1, is the shift to prose after the love-test has ended and Cordelia has departed. The last words in verse, spoken by the noble France – 'Come, my fair Cordelia ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Act 1 Scene Alack ALBANY audience Bedlam beggars blinding Burgundy characters Child Rowland complete the table contrast Copy and complete CORDELIA KING LEAR CORNWALL daughters death dost dramatic irony Duke Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloucester EDGAR GLOUCESTER EDGAR emphasise enters Exit eyes father FOOL KING LEAR Fortune France GENTLEMAN give GLOUCESTER EDGAR GLOUCESTER Gloucester's gods Gonerill and Regan Gonerill's hast hath hear heart iambic pentameter iambs imagery Jacobean James justice KENT KING LEAR Kent’s KING LEAR FOOL KING LEAR KENT kingdom Kingdom of Britain knave language Lear and Cordelia Lear's letter lines look Lord Lord Chamberlain's Men Madam means messenger nature night Nuncle Nunn nutshell OSWALD KENT paraphrase might read pathetic fallacy Peter Brook play play’s poor Prithee Questions REGAN GONERILL servant sister soliloquy speak speech storm tell Text notes thee thine Trevor Nunn trochee villain words