A famous proverb is that "Absolute power is absolutely corrupt." This is true, but it is unwavering to believe that the patience of this power may be similarly impaired. In Richard II of William Shakespeare, a dramatic role faces this dilemma. Richard believed that his demands of the throne were decided and sacred orders, and he found that when he returned from war he got lost his power to England. In the speech of "The Death of the King" in Act 3 Act 2, Richard realized he was a man even though he was a king.
William Shakespeare's historical drama is believed to be written by Richard II in about 1595. It is based on the lifetime of the King of Richard II in the UK (a ruling from 1377 to 1399) and is the first part of a four-part series, mentioned to some scholars as Henleads, He plays three times about Richard's successor. : Henry IV, Part 1; Henry IV, Part 2; This theater covers the last two years of Richard's life from 1398 to 1400. The first bill was asked by Richard King to sit solemnly at the throne and mediate the dispute between Thomas Mowbray and Richard's cousin. Later Henry IV's Henry Bowling Broke accused Mowbray wasting Richard's money on the king's soldiers and killing Bowlingbrook's uncle, Duke Gloucester. At the same time, the father of Bowling Broke, the first Duke of Lancaster, John Gunter believed Richard himself was responsible for the murder of his brothers.
William Shakespeare's Henry V is not considered one of his best plays; it is actually the last part of the first three games. Both Part 1 and Part 2 Richard II and Henry IV guide readers through Henry V's plot. Henry V first performed in Grove Theater in 1599. William Shakespeare writes Richard II (1593), Richard III (1594), and Henry IV in three copies (1597-1958). Henry V has completed a series of plays covering British political history from 1398 to 1485. The previous play showed Henry when he was young. They describe how lower class people can get along with him. Richard II and Henry IV drew Henry as they learned to understand their own common themes and found their own values. Many scenes of Henry V indicate Henry's merciful character and his personal beliefs about religion and justice.