- All's Well That Ends Well
- Antony and Cleopatra
- As You Like It
- The Comedy of Errors
- Coriolanus
- Cymbeline
- Hamlet
- Henry IV, Part 1
- Henry IV, Part 2
- Henry V
- Henry VI, Part 1
- Henry VI, Part 2
- Henry VI, Part 3
- Henry VIII
- Julius Caesar
- King John
- King Lear
- Love's Labor's Lost
- A Lover's Complaint
- Macbeth
- Measure for Measure
- The Merchant of Venice
- The Merry Wives of Windsor
- A Midsummer Night's Dream
- Much Ado About Nothing
- Othello
- Pericles
- The Rape of Lucrece
- Richard II
- Richard III
- Romeo and Juliet
- Shakespeare's Sonnets
- The Taming of the Shrew
- The Tempest
- Timon of Athens
- Titus Andronicus
- Troilus and Cressida
- Twelfth Night
- The Two Gentlemen of Verona
- Venus and Adonis
- The Winter's Tale
When Toru returns to Waseda University in the fall for the start of his second year of school, he finds that the violent student revolution which swept up so many of his fellow classmates has been effectively quashed. The worldwide movement to dismantle the structure of the modern-day university has failed, and Toru’s revolutionary classmates have returned to lectures with their tails tucked between their legs. Contemptuous of their failure, bitter about his own struggles at school and in his personal life, and steadily missing Kizuki, Toru’s existentialism begins to verge on nihilism. He doesn’t say in this passage that…