declares, “And God forgive them that so much have swayed/Your majesty’s good thoughts away from me. /I will redeem all this on Percy’s head..” (3.2.130-132). This line simply means that Prince Henry will win the honor by spilling Hotspur’s blood. Shakespeare uses this scene to show the “accepted” contrasting ways to receive honor. Hotspur goes out willing on his own and fights for himself. On the other side of the spectrum, it seems that Prince Henry wants the “easy” way to receive honor by killing
In this week’s first lecture we opened by watching the prologue from a production of Henry V. We discussed how this plays setting is that of some years after Henry IV. The present king Henry is the matured prince Hal from the last story. Shakespeare referred to King Henry V as “the mirror of all Christian kings, as he is a reflection of what Christian kings should be. We then talked about the essence of how this grand type of story could be effectively performed in a small wooden theater. We talked
Shakespeare celebrates this English monarch, displaying what makes him a good leader. Henry expels justice and mercy, he listens, he motivates, and he is gravely aware of his responsibilities as king. Like the historical Henry V, Shakespeare’s Henry V was an enlightened and effective executive leader. (Herbel, 2015) The play is often referred to as a vehicle for inspiring patriotism, which well might have been the case in Shakespeare’s time and was written as a tribute to the king who won back the
The French King John II chased Edward III’s son with all of the France army and caught him at Poitiers. Edward’s army barely had sixty-five hundred men, while John had twenty thousand men. Since the French force outnumbered the English force, John filed with confidence. He
Both being a symbol of honor and unity, Saint Joan and King Henry V were very different people. Living at different times, leaving legacies in opposing countries, and leading their armies into gruesome battles, they are to be remembered as great. Against all odds Joan changes her fate through the will of God and convinces her people to let her become their leader despite being a young peasant girl. Although Henry did die just before Joan became known to the world, his impactful speeches to his desperate
Shakespeare's play Macbeth shows the roots of all evil, our own human nature. The play is centered on the coexistence of good and evil. Macbeth, unlike any other Shakespeare play has the protagonist convert to evil. In the beginning of the play, Macbeth is shown as a hero in the Scottish army, that is ironic because Macbeth defeats a traitor and he himself becomes one later. Macbeth knows his place in the world. He is fully capable of distinguishing between right and wrong. Macbeth purposely disregards
In Richard II, Richard is raised as to be a young, poetic, and immature king. He enjoys the luxuries of being King, but does not connect with his ruling land and its people. Richard is a young king who possesses little to no experience, for he believes that he is God’s representative on Earth and states in Act Three that nothing will be able to take his crown. When threatened by Bolingbroke and his army, Richard assumes that the Lord will protect him throughout his battles and does not do anything
during the first two acts of this play may occur on a larger scale than the robbery previously discussed, but they too reflect similar themes of loyalty and betrayal. In a manner of speaking it could be said that Henry not only betrayed his cousin Richard II when he seized the crown through murder, but he also betrayed the entire kingdom in his disregard for the traditional customs of ascension. Henry’s seizure of the throne through force culminated in a period of great instability and civil war, which
Assignment Two – HIST 304 | The Peasant’s Revolt and The Decline of Serfdom | Why did the Peasants’ Revolt Occur? Did the insurgents hope to abolish serfdom? How and why did serfdom decline and eventually disappear in England, notwithstanding the failure of the 1381 uprising and other influences of lower class protest against social inequality and injustice? | Naomi Woods Student 297278812/22/2011 | The Peasants Revolt is one of the most well known revolts of Medieval England, the revolt began
negotiations with France and made some demands that the French thought was ridiculous. King Henry V was willing to give up some items in the Treaty but only if France paid 1.6 million crowns; part of the debt owed his ancestors for the capture of John II. In addition, he wanted the France to give up Aquitaine, Normandy, Touraine, Anjou, Brittany, Flanders and other territories. King Henry would marry the Princess of France, King Charles VI daughter and received pay of 600,000 crowns (Keegan 80).