000 01610nam a2200229Ia 4500
001 89057
003 0000000000
005 20211103222654.0
008 060105s1974 000 0 eng d
040 _erda
050 _aPR 2819.A2
_b.Sh15 1974
100 _aShakespeare, William
_925913
245 0 _aKing Lear /
_cWilliam Shakespeare ; edited by Maramba, Asuncion David,; with an introduction by Mary Alexis G. Montelibano.
264 _aMandaluyong, Rizal :
_bCacho Hermanos, Inc.,
_c[1974]
300 _axix, 112 pages ;
_c23 cm.
336 _atext
_2rdacontent
338 _avolume
_2rdacarrier
520 _aWhen William Shakespeare sat down to write The Tragedy of King Lear in the year 1605, he had fifteen years of drama writing and forty-one years of experiencing life behind him. By this time, Shakespeare, Poet-Dramatist, had succeeded in the technical mastery of his art, but Shakespeare, Man, was far from finished in his profound questioning of Life. As a matter of fact, it is in King Lear where Shakespeare's growing awareness of all that is most deeply disturbing in human life forces him to come to terms with questions probing into the nature of man, as well as man's relationships with his fellowman and with the world around him. And since the play has so transcended time from the Elizabethan Era to our Atomic Age, the curiosity to see why King Lear is so immortal brings us to do a little of our own exploration. --From the introduction
700 _aMaramba, Asunsion David
_950695
942 _cIRC
999 _c62523
_d62523