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inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
Standing head and shoulders above all other Shakespearean interpretations, this is the masterwork of the brilliant English scholar, G. Wilson Knight.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
Part of the G.Wilson Knight collection, the essays included in this volume constitute a fairly consistent record of his attempts over a period of some forty years to explore the deeper significances of Shakespearian poetry and drama.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
First Published in 2002. This is a collection of essays and commentary on the later Shakespearian tragedies of Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Macbeth, Coriolanus, Anthony and Cleopatra and Richard II.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
First published in 2002. This book is a collection of essays on the interpretation of Shakespeare's final plays and includes works on Pericles, A Winter's Tale; Cymbeline, The Tempest and Henry VIII.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
This is Volume XII of the G.Wilson Knight collected works and includes essays and commentary on the works of Spenser, Milton's prose and poetry and Swift. It concludes with a essays looking at Byron's poetry and dramatic prose.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
This is a collection of essays and commentary on some of Shakespeare’s Sonnets looking at the areas of symbolism, time and eternity, integration and their expansion and moves onto the metaphysical poem of the Phoenix and the Turtle and ...
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
This book has grown from Knight’s dramatic recital 'Shakespeare's Dramatic Challenge', and therefore includes a prefatory note on his stage experience.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
First Published in 2002. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
This is Volume IX of the G.Wilson Knight collected works and includes commentary on the works of Wordsworth, Coleridge, an essay on Shelley and Keats.
inauthor:"G. Wilson Knight" from books.google.com
“G. Wilson Knight approaches Ibsen in substantially the same way he approaches Shakespeare.