Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Study of Shakespeare's King Richard the Second
II. That in act 2 the counter-plot Should develop; that is, complications, difficulties, and dangers impending to thwart the action initiated in act 1 should be fully indicated, together with the dramatis personae among whom they originate.
III. That in act 3 we should have the bringing together of these two groups of persons, of these opposing plots, and a struggle of forces, not apparently decisive, but indicating with certainty to all except the participants the final result.
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