Lord mayor,--
-Duke of Buckingham
King Richard the Third Act III Scene v, Line 14
Yup, Lord mayor. That’s it. Actually, there’s a beginning to the line. It gets interrupted by a little stage direction, and it actually looks like this:
Let me entertain
him
Enter the MAYOR
and CATESBY
Lord
mayor,--
And then Buckingham gets interrupted by Richard. It’s not a particularly inspiring line. It’s part of a scene where Richard and Buckingham are up to a bit of political intrigue as they work on getting Richard the crown.
There’s just a
ton of political intrigue in Will’s history plays. And so much of it is so
similar to all the political intrigue that continues today. None of it’s
changed much. They say it’s all about the Benjamins, but I think that to a lot
of these characters (I’m speaking of Will’s characters and of the real-life
ones that fill our media coverage today) it’s all about the power. Will that
ever change? Let me answer my own question: I think it’s part of the human
condition, so no, it will never change.
1 comment:
Was the political intrigue he wrote about based on real events? Or did he make it all up?
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