Quidditas Volume 8 Article 29 1987 Review Essay: Eric Sams, ed, Shakespeare's Lost Play "Edmund Ironside" Charles L. Squier University of Colorado-Boulder Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra Part of the Comparative Literature Commons, History Commons, Philosophy Commons, and the Renaissance Studies Commons Recommended Citation Squier, Charles L. (1987) "Review Essay: Eric Sams, ed, Shakespeare's Lost Play "Edmund Ironside"," Quidditas: Vol. 8 , Article 29. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/rmmra/vol8/iss1/29 This Review is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Quidditas by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact
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[email protected]. 214 Book Review oldier in the service of Catholic Venice. Honor as a wa r hero, coupled with knowledge of Desdemona' innocen e. leads Othello to a Stoic and honorabl uicide. Mind-moving literary criticism o curs when a writer leads the reader along, uch as Wymer does with hi rich, five-page di cour e on Othello. Readers are Jes apt LO be convinced when Wymer, arguing that paradox is at the heart of Christian do ·trine ab ut despair, jams together in one paragraph reference · to Chaucer, Morality pl ays, hake peare, and Luther. uch wide] s altered allusions, in terms of writer, genres, and time periods, leave the reader bewildered and ceptical. At thi (a nd other) poinLS in the book, one i tempted LO pencil in marginalia requesting omi ion. Wymer can make his case or the paradox of Chri tian and toical doctrine in a few pages, 1101 man .