have no place in his aggressive male world: "[Richard] at no point reflects a concern for the consequences of an act before he commits it, and his momentary remorse is relatively superficial, the result more of fear than of contrition or spiritual insight" (Champion 68). In fact, his only suggestion of moral anguish comes in Act V, on the eve of the climactic battle.
The ghosts of Richard's victims visit the two armies in their encampments near Bosworth Field. Passing
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