Difference between revisions of "Merry Wives of Windsor"
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(Created page with ""Merry Wives of Windsor [is] his most locally detailed play... Set in a small town next to a royal castle and surrounding fields and forest in eastern Berkshire, its fine-grai...") |
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"Merry Wives of Windsor [is] his most locally detailed play... Set in a small town next to a royal castle and surrounding fields and forest in eastern Berkshire, its fine-grained mosaic of natural and human eco-systems (woods, parks, chases, fields heath, mead, urban and rural buildings) is meshed by distinct corridors (the River Thames, a ditch, footpaths, roads, streets). These features direct much of the toing and froing of the plays' domestic intrigue"<ref>{{cite book |last=Martin |first=Randall |date=2015 |title=Shakespeare and Ecology |url=https://global.oup.com/academic/product/shakespeare-and-ecology-9780199567027?cc=us&lang=en& |publisher=OUP |page=33 |isbn=9780199567027 |author-link=}}</ref> (Martin: 33) | "Merry Wives of Windsor [is] his most locally detailed play... Set in a small town next to a royal castle and surrounding fields and forest in eastern Berkshire, its fine-grained mosaic of natural and human eco-systems (woods, parks, chases, fields heath, mead, urban and rural buildings) is meshed by distinct corridors (the River Thames, a ditch, footpaths, roads, streets). These features direct much of the toing and froing of the plays' domestic intrigue"<ref>{{cite book |last=Martin |first=Randall |date=2015 |title=Shakespeare and Ecology |url=https://global.oup.com/academic/product/shakespeare-and-ecology-9780199567027?cc=us&lang=en& |publisher=OUP |page=33 |isbn=9780199567027 |author-link=}}</ref> (Martin: 33) |
Revision as of 02:29, 11 October 2019
Books and Articles Related to Henry Neville
"Merry Wives of Windsor [is] his most locally detailed play... Set in a small town next to a royal castle and surrounding fields and forest in eastern Berkshire, its fine-grained mosaic of natural and human eco-systems (woods, parks, chases, fields heath, mead, urban and rural buildings) is meshed by distinct corridors (the River Thames, a ditch, footpaths, roads, streets). These features direct much of the toing and froing of the plays' domestic intrigue"<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> (Martin: 33)