Policy: King Henry V is portrayed as the ideal king
because of his ready assumption of the moral mantle that accompanies his
divinely appointed kingship.
Definition: King
Henry V, one of the most charismatic and successful of Shakespeare’s kings (and
arguably of English history, too), is so defined largely because of his ready assumption of the moral mantle that
accompanied his divinely appointed kingship.
Comparison:
Unlike so many of the kings that Shakespeare chose to portray, Henry V is
considered one of the most charismatic and successful because of his ready assumption of the moral mantle that
accompanied his divinely appointed kingship.
Evaluation: King
Henry is arguably a better king than the rest portrayed by Shakespeare because
of his ready assumption of the moral
mantle that accompanied his divinely appointed kingship.
Casual: Though
no one cause can be fully credited, Shakespeare portrays Henry V as such a
successful leader because of his ready
assumption of the moral mantle that accompanied his divinely appointed
kingship.
Your definition and evaluation claims jump out to me the most! I'd love to see the reasoning behind these claims, which means it sounds like an interesting paper!
ReplyDeleteI agree with Erin and would choose the evaluation claim as the most interesting!
ReplyDelete