Part of the "Everyman" series which has been re-set with wide margins for notes and easy-to-read type. Each title includes a themed introduction by leading authorities on the subject, life-and-times chronology of the author, text summaries, annotated reading lists and selected criticism and notes.
"They are the work of someone whose ear is unerring." --W.H. Auden
"He is writing about the world, the largeness of which he had perhaps only recently discovered." --Mark Van Doren
"The striking peculiarity of Shakespeare's mind was its generic quality, its power to communicate with all other minds." --William Hazlitt
"Shakespeare is the greatest university of all." --William Carlos Williams
They are the work of someone whose ear is unerring. "W.H. Auden"
He is writing about the world, the largeness of which he had perhaps only recently discovered. "Mark Van Doren"
The striking peculiarity of Shakespeare's mind was its generic quality, its power to communicate with all other minds. "William Hazlitt"
Shakespeare is the greatest university of all. "William Carlos Williams""
"They are the work of someone whose ear is unerring." --W.H. Auden
"He is writing about the world, the largeness of which he had perhaps only recently discovered." --Mark Van Doren
"The striking peculiarity of Shakespeare's mind was its generic quality, its power to communicate with all other minds." --William Hazlitt
"Shakespeare is the greatest university of all." --William Carlos Williams