In addition to the sprites and fairies that appear in some of the early comedies (Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream) and in the later romances (Ariel in The Tempest), Shakespeare includes both ghosts and witches in his tragedies. Although the spirits of Shakespeare's imaginative fairy realms are only real within their domains, and while the ghosts who appear to Richard III and Macbeth are guilty-ridden hallucinations, the ghost of Hamlet and the witches or weird sisters of Macbeth are given substance. Belief in ghosts and in witches remained widespread in Elizabethan England: King James...
yes :)
Malcolm and Macduff are both key characters in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth." They share a common goal of overthrowing Macbeth and restoring rightful rule to Scotland. Both characters are also deeply affected by the actions and consequences of Macbeth's reign.
Shakespeare was alive later than when the plague killed Europe.
The time period just affected Shakespeare's plays - come on.
no atleast i do not think so
All of them were affected in one way or another.
He created ideals of love and passion through his poetry.
It is very affective; I'm affected by its effects all the time.
Describe 5 ways in which globalization has affected a business in their effoet to create a competitive advantage.
describe mozart's psychological make-up..
In Shakespeare's day, the word "humour" did not mean comedy; it was a reference to a medical theory which stated that people's health depended on the balance of four liquids found in the body. These liquids were blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile, and are based on liquids which actually are present in the body. It was felt that these liquids affected your personality and character. A person dominated by blood was sanguine, by phlegm was phlegmatic, by yellow bile was choleric, and by black bile was melancholy. We still use these words nowadays to describe types of characters. In Elizabethan drama, a humourous man was a person whose character was distinctive and which dominated his action. Ben Jonson's play Every Man in His Humour (in which Shakespeare acted) was entirely built around such stock characters. Shakespeare used them too: Jaques in As You Like It is melancholic as is Hamlet ("Out of my weakness and my melancholy" II, ii), and Hotspur (Henry IV Part One) is sanguine.
Rounded characters are characters who are well developed. Or in other words, characters who are written like real people; they experience and are affected by change, deal with conflicts, makes decisions and are affected by their choices, and generally just learn and evolve in some way during the course of the story.