The book examines the conventions and significance of endings in Shakespeare''s classical tragedies and poetry analysing how they engender multiple and ambiguous interpretations that contribute to shaping closures. In the body of literature set in the classical world closure is often linked to the delineation of boundaries that serve dual functions: they can mitigate political unrest by transforming external threats into manageable entities or they can serve to suppress human desire and ambition. In works such as Venus and Adonis The Rape of Lucrece and Titus Andronicus the endings function as forms of consolation effectively shielding against external dangers or subsuming internal disorder. Conversely the notion of closure in Julius Caesar Antony and Cleopatra Timon of Athens Coriolanus and Troilus and Cressida is reinterpreted by making it act first as an impediment that obstructs the protagonists'' aspirations and ambitions and second as a criterion for the critical assessment of human potential evaluated against the diverse endeavours accomplishments and failures of authoritative figures.
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