Henry IV Part TwoPenguin UK, 2005 M04 7 - 352 pages 'This, of the history plays, is The Tragedy ... the most lyrical Shakespeare ever wrote' Simon Schama |
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... Bardolph has a longwinded speech that is almost bound to be abbreviated when the play is performed. Ironically so, given that its very subject is the anxiety of being cut short, like 'th'appearing buds' (39) more likely to be destroyed ...
... Bardolph are vividly aware that the world of words is in a state of chassis (to borrow a phrase from Sean O'Casey's ... Bardolph's imperturbably circular definition of 'accommodate', when he is put on the spot by Justice.
... Bardolph, and the way Shallow chimes in to support it. His characters are always warming or cooling towards each other, rarely static and neutral. It is a wonderful little passage that culminates in Shallow's praise of Bardolph for ...
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