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Fantastic!
from chriszm, 18 April 2013
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5 out of 5
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Excellent - what an inspiration to others. Thank you
from gursharandenley, 29 November 2012
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5 out of 5
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A very thorough and useful plan from which you could undertake a coursework essay or indeed use as a scheme of work to guide your students through the play and its background information.
from ajwebster, 12 March 2011. Member of the TES Panel.
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5 out of 5
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Romeo and Juliet ends in the tragic deaths of two teenagers, and may seem like a story that warns against disobeying one's parents, or making crazy plans that involve fake suicide, or falling in love too young and too fast (way, way, way too fast, but this article isn't trying to judge them), but the first lines of the play seem to suggest something different entirely. The play's preamble (in rarity in Shakespeare's tragedies) references how The Montague's "ancient grudge" with the Capulets leads to "new mutiny" and warns against "civil blood" that makes "civil hands unclean." The preamble also calls young Romeo and Juliet "star-crossed lovers" indicating that their tragic endings are not in fact the result of their own doing, but instead something fated, something out of their hands.
For more information visit http://www.courseworkwriter.com or just email us at support@uktermpaper.com
from Jakelewis11, 21 December 2010
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5 out of 5
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Thank you so much. As a first year teacher planning to introduce Shakespeare for the first time, I have found this unit of work invaluable. Thank you so much for sharing.
from dgblight, 09 April 2010
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5 out of 5
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