King LearBarnes & Noble Books, 2007 - 397 Seiten King Lear, by William Shakespeare, is part of the Barnes & Noble Shakespeare series. This unique series features newly edited texts prepared by leading scholars from America and Great Britain, in collaboration with one of the world's foremost Shakespeare authorities, David Scott Kastan of Columbia University. Together they have produced texts as faithful as possible to those that Shakespeare wrote.
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Seite 152
... Fortune was often dismissed as a pagan belief , an explanation for the vicissitudes of fate , though others thought the changes brought about by Fortune's wheel were not random but God's rewards or punishments for human actions.See 5.3 ...
... Fortune was often dismissed as a pagan belief , an explanation for the vicissitudes of fate , though others thought the changes brought about by Fortune's wheel were not random but God's rewards or punishments for human actions.See 5.3 ...
Seite 240
... fortune Thing most cast down by fortune 3 still in esperance 4 Always in hope The worst returns to laughter I.e. , when things are at their worst , any change must be for the good . 5 Owes nothing Has nothing left to expose 6 poorly led ...
... fortune Thing most cast down by fortune 3 still in esperance 4 Always in hope The worst returns to laughter I.e. , when things are at their worst , any change must be for the good . 5 Owes nothing Has nothing left to expose 6 poorly led ...
Seite 281
... fortunes , take my eyes . 155 160 165 170 howl / Pay attention I know thee well enough ; thy name is Gloucester . Thou must be patient . We came crying hither . Thou know'st the first time ... fortune Born to be fortune's Act 4 , Scene 5 281.
... fortunes , take my eyes . 155 160 165 170 howl / Pay attention I know thee well enough ; thy name is Gloucester . Thou must be patient . We came crying hither . Thou know'st the first time ... fortune Born to be fortune's Act 4 , Scene 5 281.
Inhalt
Introduction to King Lear | 1 |
A Chronology | 23 |
Key to the Play Text | 39 |
Urheberrecht | |
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action affection Albany appear attendants bear become Britain comes Cordelia Cornwall course daughters death dost Draw Duke Edgar edition Edmund England English Enter exits eyes father fear fire Folio follow Fool fortune France give Gloucester gods Goneril grace hand hast hath head hear heart hold honor human intended James keep Kent kind King Lear kingdom known Lear's less letter live London look lord madam matter means mind nature never night noble Oswald performed perhaps play poor produce Quarto Queen reference Regan role rule scene seems sense servant Shakespeare shows sister speak speech stage stand suffering suggests sword tell thee thine things thou thought true turn