Paradoxically, the main character in Shakespeare's King Henry IV Part 1 is not the supreme ruler of England himself. Instead, his son, Henry, comes to the fore, evolving through the course of the play from low-life, irresponsible royal offspring into a true prince, developing essential qualities of the nobleman, including honor, grace, and bravery. Hal is a very complex figure in the book to analyze, as he can be either sanguine, choleric, melancholic, or pragmatic according to the situation he is in and obstacles that he needs to overcome along his path to the position of a monarch. Therefore, he combines all four of human temperaments, which makes him unique and superior to all other personages in the text. King Henry
Paradoxically, the main character in Shakespeare's King Henry IV Part 1 is not the supreme ruler of England himself. Instead, his son, Henry, comes to the fore, evolving through the course of the play from low-life, irresponsible royal offspring into a true prince, developing essential qualities of the nobleman, including honor, grace, and bravery. Hal is a very complex figure in the book to analyze, as he can be either sanguine, choleric, melancholic, or pragmatic according to the situation he is in and obstacles that he needs to overcome along his path to the position of a monarch. Therefore, he combines all four of human temperaments, which makes him unique and superior to all other personages in the text. King Henry