La vie et la mort du roi Richard II by William Shakespeare
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Shakespeare's Richard II is a play about a king who thinks he's a god and the rude awakening that follows.
The Story
King Richard feels his power is absolute, given by God. To fund a war, he illegally seizes the land and titles of his exiled cousin, Henry Bolingbroke. Big mistake. Bolingbroke returns to England, not to claim the crown at first, but just his rightful inheritance. But Richard's rule is so weak and unpopular that support melts away. With hardly a fight, Richard is forced to surrender the crown. The play follows his journey from entitled monarch to imprisoned prisoner, where he's left with nothing but his own eloquent words to ponder what it all meant.
Why You Should Read It
Forget the action—this is a psychological drama. Richard is fascinating. He's a terrible king, vain and irresponsible, but Shakespeare makes you feel for him. His speeches in defeat are breathtaking. He questions the very idea of kingship: if the crown is taken, who is he? Is he still a king without a kingdom, or just a man named Richard? It’s a haunting look at identity and the emptiness of power once the ceremony is stripped away. Bolingbroke, the pragmatic new king, is his perfect opposite—a man of action with almost no poetry in him.
Final Verdict
Perfect for anyone who loves character studies over battle scenes. If you're intrigued by flawed, theatrical personalities or have ever wondered about the human cost of political downfall, this is your play. It's less about history and more about the soul-crushing moment when a person's entire sense of self is invalidated. A stunning, lyrical, and surprisingly modern tragedy.
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Jackson Young
1 year agoThe formatting on this digital edition is flawless.
James Williams
1 year agoSolid story.
Elijah Perez
9 months agoHaving read this twice, the author's voice is distinct and makes complex topics easy to digest. A true masterpiece.