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portada Henry IV Part-II (en Inglés)
Formato
Libro Físico
Idioma
Inglés
N° páginas
138
Encuadernación
Tapa Blanda
Dimensiones
22.9 x 15.2 x 0.8 cm
Peso
0.21 kg.
ISBN13
9789394973220
Categorías

Henry IV Part-II (en Inglés)

William Shakespeare (Autor) · Double 9 Booksllp · Tapa Blanda

Henry IV Part-II (en Inglés) - Shakespeare, William

Libro Físico

$ 397.11

$ 722.03

Ahorras: $ 324.91

45% descuento
  • Estado: Nuevo
  • Quedan 60 unidades
Origen: Estados Unidos (Costos de importación incluídos en el precio)
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Reseña del libro "Henry IV Part-II (en Inglés)"

Henry IV, Part 2 (1598) is one of Shakespeare's authentic plays and the third portion of Shakespeare's Lancastrian Tetralogy that additionally incorporates Richard II, Henry IV, Part I, and Henry V. This quadruplicate was adjusted into the widely praised TV series The Hollow Crown (2012), featuring Tom Hiddleston as Prince Hal/Henry V. A portion of the significant topics of this play incorporates power, honor, great authority, and transitioning. With Henry IV (Bolingbroke) weak in the lofty position and fighting with the resistance, Prince Hal should figure out how to set to the side his innocent partying and take on the position of capable authority. To this end, the personality of Falstaff is basic; he reflects the age and sickness of King Henry, and his lively disintegration fills in as a contradiction for Prince Hal, who gets ready to become a lord. Henry IV, Part I finishes after the clash of Shrewsbury. Ruler Hal has killed Hotspur, the bold and hot-blooded child of the dissident Earl of Northumberland. The renegade powers lose heart and begin dispersing, permitting the lord's men to win the day. Henry IV, Part 2 gets following this, with a preface conveyed by Rumor, who flows bogus reports of a radical triumph. However, couriers escaping Shrewsbury show up to tell Northumberland the genuine result of the fight and that his child is dead. Northumberland promises ridiculous retribution, wanting to assemble more help for his goal. To acquire adherents, he perceives the need to change the story. The altogether disobedience to King Henry is rebranded as exemplary vengeance for Bolingbroke's usurpation of Richard II. He escapes to Scotland to perceive how occasions work out before he designs direct activity once more. Falstaff disregards the conflict even though he has requested to enroll people in the lord's military. All things being equal, he proceeds with his life of frivolous wrongdoing and parties with whores, dishonestly guaranteeing that he slew Hotspur. His page brings a report from Falstaff's primary care physician that he is sick, and he is reminded all through the play that he is old and biting the dust. He barely maintains a strategic distance from capture for burglary and obligation with his regal bonus. The Lord Chief Justice is disinterested, yet he releases Falstaff with an update that he is to go north and begin gathering men. Falstaff goes to visit a whore, Doll Tearsheet, ignorant that they are being seen by Prince Hal and Poins who are camouflaged. Falstaff expresses a few unattractive things about both of them, accidentally driving the wedge further among him and his young companions. The Prince uncovers himself and goes up against Falstaff. A courier shows up from the ruler, searching for the Prince. Falstaff at long last chooses to go to enroll men when subsequent insubordination begins yet takes hush money from men who don't wish to be recruited. In the interim, the King is ailing. He begrudges the individuals who can rest since a sleeping disorder and a weighty soul keep him alert. He conveys one of the most well-known lines of the play, "Uneasy lies the head that wears a crown." Reflecting on his previous companionship with Northumberland, he recalls his screwy way to drive: how he achieved the crown by a similar sort of resistance imposed against him now. He wants to reduce his responsibility through an excursion to the Holy Land. In the field, the Machiavellian Prince John of Lancaster (Hal's more youthful sibling) draws in with the dissidents. He makes ...
William Shakespeare
  (Autor)
Ver Página del Autor
William Shakespeare (Stratford-upon-Avon, c. 23 de abril de 1564jul. - Ibídem, 23 de abril/3 de mayo de 1616)​ fue un dramaturgo, poeta y actor inglés. Conocido en ocasiones como el Bardo de Avon (o simplemente el Bardo), se le considera el escritor más importante en lengua inglesa y uno de los más célebres de la literatura universal.

Según la Encyclopædia Britannica, «Shakespeare es generalmente reconocido como el más grande de los escritores de todos los tiempos, figura única en la historia de la literatura. La fama de otros poetas, tales como Homero y Dante Alighieri, o de novelistas tales como León Tolstoy o Charles Dickens, ha trascendido las barreras nacionales, pero ninguno de ellos ha llegado a alcanzar la reputación de Shakespeare, cuyas obras hoy se leen y representan con mayor frecuencia y en más países que nunca. La profecía de uno de sus grandes contemporáneos, Ben Jonson, se ha cumplido por tanto: "Shakespeare no pertenece a una sola época sino a la eternidad"».
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