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An important source for anyone interested in period staging of Shakespeare's plays.
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It's a well-told story, complete with a surprise or two at the end. The whole logic of the shrinking house clue ended up feeling slightly contrived, but the path to discovery was an enjoyable one. The boys seem to walk right into one trap after another, but these detectives have never left a mystery unsolved and refuse to do so now, even in the face of danger. There is plenty of action in these pages, but this story really does hinge on the deductive reasoning powers of Jupiter Jones. In this, his fourth Three Investigators mystery (and the eighteenth in the series as a whole), William Arden demonstrates a good feel for the characters, but even he fails to capture all of the nuances that made series creator Robert Arthur's books so gripping and entertaining.
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I first read Harbage's book in college nearly twenty years ago to help me through an advanced level course, but recently picked it up again to find it just as fresh and inspiring. Many of us, even those who love to read, initially experience frustration when reading the massive works of Shakespeare. Harbage asserts that this predicament is due primarily to "barriers to communion," certain challenges we experience in our efforts to understand Shakespeare's four-hundred-year-old writings, not the least of which Hargage calls the bard's "complex simplicity."
But Harbage, with delicate and expert hands, removes the barriers one by one allowing us a clearer view without telling us how to respond so that we can experience the works in our own unique and wonderful way.
We learn about alliteration, prose, oxymora, juxtapositions, characterization, metamorphosis, submerged metaphors, "diction, the metrical and non-metrical media, and the dramatic design as it emerges from a script" until when, before we know it, we become our own producers for plays that magically dance and flow across the stages of our minds. By the end of the book we have the foundational tools we need to truly enjoy all the passion, wit, and marvelous imagery that is Shakespeare.
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For a starter on inverse problems, the book presents the latest work and provides pointers to follow up the content. This will save a lot of boring library work :)
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The play has the first of Shakespeare's many brave, resourceful and cross-dressing heroines, Julia.
Shakespeare always used his fools and clowns well to make serious statements about life and love, and to expose the folly of the nobles. Two Gentlemen of Verona has two very fine comic scenes featuring Launce. In one, he lists the qualities of a milk maid he has fallen in love with and helps us to see that love is blind and relative. In another, he describes the difficulties he has delivering a pet dog to Silvia on his master, Proteus', behalf in a way that will keep you merry on many a cold winter's evening.
The story also has one of the fastest plot resolutions you will ever find in a play. Blink, and the play is over. This nifty sleight of hand is Shakespeare's way of showing that when you get noble emotions and character flowing together, things go smoothly and naturally.
The overall theme of the play develops around the relative conflicts that lust, love, friendship, and forgiveness can create and overcome. Proteus is a man who seems literally crazed by his attraction to Silvia so that he loses all of his finer qualities. Yet even he can be redeemed, after almost doing a most foul act. The play is very optimistic in that way.
I particularly enjoy the plot device of having Proteus and Julia (pretending to be a page) playing in the roles of false suitors for others to serve their own interests. Fans of Othello will enjoy these foreshadowings of Iago.
The words themselves can be a bit bare at times, requiring good direction and acting to bring out the full conflict and story. For that reason, I strongly urge you to see the play performed first. If that is not possible, do listen to an audio recording as you read along. That will help round out the full atmosphere that Shakespeare was developing here.
After you finish Two Gentlemen of Verona, think about where you would honor friendship above love, where equal to love, and where below love. Is friendship less important than love? Or is friendship merely less intense? Can you experience both with the same person?
Enjoy close ties of mutual commitment . . . with all those you feel close to!
The plot is that of a philosopher's paradise being invaded by the most nefarious of things...love.
Shakespeare means many things when he speaks of love: often it can be shallow, bawdy lecherous love, sometimes it is an almost Petrachan yearning "courtly" love, once in a while it is a self destructive, clasping, obsessive love. Here it is pretty much straight-up attraction of the "hey, I'd like to marry you" variety.
As the noble, well-meaning but unable to restrain themselves philosopher's fall for the beauties of this tale, many awkward situations occur. Much of the humor here is of this vein. Plays on words and outrageous situations provide most of the laughs.
For fans of Shakespeare, I wholeheartedly endorse this great play. For beginners, I recommend starting with one of the plays mentioned above.