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SHAKSPER 1992: Another R: Shakespeare as Himself
From: Hardy M. Cook (hmcook@boe00.minc.umd.edu) Date: 12/11/92
Shakespeare Electronic Conference, Vol. 3, No. 366. Friday, 11 December 1992. From: Melinda M Hale <melinda@world.std.com> Date: Thursday, 10 Dec 92 19:09:50 EST Subject: 3.0361 Shakespeare as Himself Comment: Re: SHK 3.0361 Shakespeare as Himself > I am looking for information on the idea of whether or not Shakespeare > ever, in writing his plays, speaks through his own voice. Many argue > that he does so in the Ghost character of _Hamlet_, but does this > happen in other characters and plays as well? Are there times when > Shakespeare acts as an "opinion editor" of sorts? I have always regarded the final lines of _Two Noble Kinsmen_ as Shakespeare's own opinion, since they reflect -- almost sum up -- some of the themes of the other plays. Furthermore, these lines have such a "parting advice" flavor; if it were a movie, this would be the part where the actor turns and faces the camera directly. This is the first thing that pops into my head, though if I really perused my Riverside, I'm sure I could come up with more. The comedies, especially, have a precise order, laid out and even numbered by the author, and if one reads them in that order, one can see how they fit together, the common ideas. Clearly, a lot of the words are Shakespeare's own opinion (how very Renaissance). Melinda Hale Boston melinda@world.std.com
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