Hello Cruel World
Tuesday, February 25, 2003
As You Like It
Act I. Scene III.
A Room in the Palace.
Enter CELIA and ROSALIND.
Cel. Why, cousin! why, Rosalind! Cupid have mercy! Not a word?
Ros. Not one to throw at a dog.
Cel. No, thy words are too precious to be cast away upon curs; throw some of them at me; come, lame me with reasons.
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Shakespeare at bartleby.com
The Oxford Shakespeare
Edited by W. J. Craig
The 1914 Oxford edition of the Complete Works of William Shakespeare ranks among the most authoritative published this century. The 37 plays, 154 sonnets and miscellaneous verse constitute the literary cornerstone of Western civilization.
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the-tech.mit.edu/Shakespeare
The Complete Works of William Shakespeare
Comedy
History
Tragedy
Poetry
The original electronic source for this server is the Complete Moby(tm) Shakespeare () , which is freely available online. The HTML versions of the plays provided here are placed in the public domain
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For other Shakespeare resources, visit the
Mr. William Shakespeare and the Internet Web site.
shakespeare.palomar.edu
This site attempts two things:
1 To be a complete annotated guide to the scholarly Shakespeare resources available on Internet. (The "Other" Sites page is a definite exception to the term "scholarly." )Our newest feature is a listing of Shakespeare Festivals.
2 To present new Shakespeare material unavailable elsewhere on the Internet, such as:
Political Writings of George Orwell
www.resort.com/~prime8/Orwell
I created this website in hopes of re-introducing Orwell to a wider readership, who may only know him through his most famous novel Nineteen Eighty Four. Seeing how frequently Orwell is quoted out of context in political discussions on the Internet -- often to support spurious arguments and political causes which he might have condemned in his own lifetime -- I hope to create a resource for political philosophers of all stripe... [snipped by MP]
Orwell was 47 years old when he succumbed to tuberculosis in January 1950. Given the astuteness of his observations on the World War II era, can we even begin to imagine what books he might have written had he lived through the Fifties? What would he have said about the Cold War? Sputnik? Television? The JFK assassination? The Beatles? Vietnam, Watergate, the moon landing? Perhaps, had he lived past the year 1984 itself, might he have commented on the end of the Cold War and the collapse of the Soviet Union? Unfortunately we'll never know.
Essays
Newspaper Columns, Letters and Editorials 1943-1946
As I Please, 4 February 1944
As I Please
As I Please, 30 June 1944
As I Please, 14 July 1944
As I Please, 24 December 1943
As I Please, 8 September 1944
As I Please, 14 April 1944
As I Please
Partisan Review, Winter 1945
As I Please
As I Please
As I Please
9 November, 1945
For questions or comments about this website please contact Patrick Farley at patrick at resortDOTcom. Please note: this e-mail address is for administrative issues only. For a discussion of Orwell's works please visit the Usenet group alt.books.george-orwell Thank you.
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