"The case against Harry Charlton was simple and strong. In his role as "investigative journalist" he was alleged to have gained knowledge of a Top Secret project at the Fenton Laboratory, London, and to have sold this information to a Russian agent. The case rested on three main ideas: a conversation overheard by an independent witness; some very incriminating papers found in Charlton's flat; and a large unexplained payment into his bank account."--Summary before t.p.
The Complete Concordance to Shakespeare: Being a Verbal Index to All the Passages in the Dramatic Works of the Poet
Titus Andronicus, like Hamlet, is a revenge tragedy but one that focuses on violence and horror[;] . . . its mood is one of revulsion (Bevington, Introduction).
I shall thus transform this stage into Athens For just so long as we're acting this comedy. ... politics and identity in Chariton, see Steven D. Smith, Greek Identity and the Athenian Past in Chariton: The Romance of Empire, ...