The third in Shakespeare's Henriad tetralogy, Henry IV Part II, following the diverging paths of the wastrel Prince Hal and the scoundrel Falstaff - one to the throne and the other to obscurity - is perhaps the most moving of the Bard's histories.
Inquirer Books, Philadelphia Inquirer: Books
Mon, 07/07/2014 - 12:44pm
The third in Shakespeare's Henriad tetralogy, Henry IV Part II, following the diverging paths of the wastrel Prince Hal and the scoundrel Falstaff - one to the throne and the other to obscurity - is perhaps the most moving of the Bard's histories.