King Lear: A Parallel Text EditionLongman, 1993 - 314 Seiten “Not only explains decorating jargon but also provides ideas, guidelines, and instructions for covering windows in dozens of different styles. Non-sewers will appreciate the attention paid to planning and answers to questions.”—Booklist. “Practical advice with clear, easy-to-follow instructions.”—Library Journal. |
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Seite 32
... foul papers , why then does it not reproduce the F passage which , according to the hypothesis pursued here , once stood in the manuscript that produced Q ? It is possible , as Doran ( 1931 ) argued in The Text of ' King Lear ' , that ...
... foul papers , why then does it not reproduce the F passage which , according to the hypothesis pursued here , once stood in the manuscript that produced Q ? It is possible , as Doran ( 1931 ) argued in The Text of ' King Lear ' , that ...
Seite 33
... foul papers this document would have been scrutinized by the censor . We cannot know what he did to it , unless we assume that there is a significant link between manuscript A2 and F ( which is also partly Greg's view : see below , 37-8 ) ...
... foul papers this document would have been scrutinized by the censor . We cannot know what he did to it , unless we assume that there is a significant link between manuscript A2 and F ( which is also partly Greg's view : see below , 37-8 ) ...
Seite 196
... foul fiend haunts Poor Tom in the voice of a nightingale . Hoppedance cries in Tom's belly for two white herring . Croak not , black angel : I have no food for thee . 15 20 20 25 12. them : Lear's daughters . 13–52 . The foul fiend ...
... foul fiend haunts Poor Tom in the voice of a nightingale . Hoppedance cries in Tom's belly for two white herring . Croak not , black angel : I have no food for thee . 15 20 20 25 12. them : Lear's daughters . 13–52 . The foul fiend ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
ACT 4 SCENE Alack Albany Albany's bastard Burgundy codpiece Cordelia Cornwall Curan daughters dear death dost thou doth Dover Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloucester Edmund emended Enter Edgar Enter Gloucester Enter Lear Exeunt Exit eyes F's reading F's text father favour follow Fool Fool's fortune foul fiend foul papers France Gentleman give Gloucester's gods Goneril Goneril and Regan grace Greg hath hear heart hither honour horse Kent Kent's King Lear knave lady Lear's letter lord madam master means messenger nature night noble nuncle Oxf TLN phrase play poor Poor Tom pray Prithee promptbook Q and F Q-only lines Q's version reason Regan revision sense servant Shakespeare sister speak stand storm suggests sword tell thee There's thine thou art traitor trumpet University College London villain whereas wits