King LearPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 368 Seiten 'The most perfect specimen of the dramatic art existing in the world' Percy Bysshe Shelley |
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... storm scene the perfect setting for its eruption; and he erased virtually every trace of his source's Christian vision, leaving his characters marooned in an altogether bleaker, pagan universe. Shakespeare's most drastic departure from ...
... storm scene the perfect setting for its eruption; and he erased virtually every trace of his source's Christian vision, leaving his characters marooned in an altogether bleaker, pagan universe. Shakespeare's most drastic departure from ...
Seite
... storm are unmistakable. But the tragedy may well owe a subtler, pervasive debt to Montaigne's radical scepticism about the unquestioned assumptions and values of the early modern world, and his readiness to ride roughshod over its most ...
... storm are unmistakable. But the tragedy may well owe a subtler, pervasive debt to Montaigne's radical scepticism about the unquestioned assumptions and values of the early modern world, and his readiness to ride roughshod over its most ...
Seite
... storm 'To wage against the enmity o'th'air, | To be a comrade with the wolf and owl' and feel 'Necessity's sharp pinch' (204–6). His parting fulmination against the 'unnatural hags' (273) he has nurtured makes pathetically plain how ...
... storm 'To wage against the enmity o'th'air, | To be a comrade with the wolf and owl' and feel 'Necessity's sharp pinch' (204–6). His parting fulmination against the 'unnatural hags' (273) he has nurtured makes pathetically plain how ...
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... storm, How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides, Your looped and windowed raggedness, defend you From seasons such as these? O, I have ta'en Too little care of this! Take physic, pomp; Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel ...
... storm, How shall your houseless heads and unfed sides, Your looped and windowed raggedness, defend you From seasons such as these? O, I have ta'en Too little care of this! Take physic, pomp; Expose thyself to feel what wretches feel ...
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... storm, only to behold both his king and Cordelia 'dead as earth' (V.3.259). By multiplying the monarch's fate in this way, by replicating its trajectory in the fates of prominent noblemen like Gloucester, Edgar and Kent, Shakespeare ...
... storm, only to behold both his king and Cordelia 'dead as earth' (V.3.259). By multiplying the monarch's fate in this way, by replicating its trajectory in the fates of prominent noblemen like Gloucester, Edgar and Kent, Shakespeare ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actors ALBANY arms bastard beggar Burgundy Cordelia Cornwall daughters death dost Dover Dr Johnson Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Edmund Elizabethan Enter Edgar Enter Lear Exeunt Exit eyes F reading father fear feel Folio follow Fool Fool’s fortune foul fiend France GENTLEMAN give Gloucester’s gods Gonerill Gonerill and Regan grace Harsnet’s hast hath heart Henry VI honour i’the justice KENT Kent’s King Lear kingdom knave knights Lear’s letter look lord madam man’s matter means nature noble nuncle o’er o’the omitted Oswald perhaps poor Poor Tom Pray presumably prose in Q Q and F Q corrected Quarto Regan Richard III scene seems sense servant Shakespeare Shakespeare’s plays sister speak speech stand storm sword tears theatrical thee There’s thine things Titus Andronicus Tom’s tragedy trumpet villain Who’s Winter’s Tale words wretches