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432 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1997
'... who would deny that Shakespeare is linguistically his most magnificent self in Falstaff? - I propose that in order to create a 'good overreacher' in the character of Henry V, and thus to kill off the legacy of Tamburlaine, Shakespeare also had to kill off part of himself. The Falstaff part which he denied was precisely that part which was most himself, which had its origins in Cade, and which owed nothing to Marlowe.'