King LearBarrons Educational Series, 1986 - 316 Seiten Here are the books that help teach Shakespeare plays without the teacher constantly needing to explain and define Elizabethan terms, slang, and other ways of expression that are different from our own. Each play is presented with Shakespeare's original lines on each left-hand page, and a modern, easy-to-understand "translation" on the facing right-hand page. All dramas are complete, with every original Shakespearian line, and a full-length modern rendition of the text. These invaluable teaching-study guides also include:
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Seite 48
... nature can reason it thus and thus , yet nature finds itself scourged by the sequent effects . Love cools , friendship falls off , brothers divide : in cities , mutinies ; in countries , discord ; in palaces , Gloucester Oh , the ...
... nature can reason it thus and thus , yet nature finds itself scourged by the sequent effects . Love cools , friendship falls off , brothers divide : in cities , mutinies ; in countries , discord ; in palaces , Gloucester Oh , the ...
Seite 136
William Shakespeare. Are in the poorest thing superfluous : Allow not nature more than nature needs , Man's life's as cheap as beast's . Thou art a lady ; If only to go warm were gorgeous , Why , nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear ...
William Shakespeare. Are in the poorest thing superfluous : Allow not nature more than nature needs , Man's life's as cheap as beast's . Thou art a lady ; If only to go warm were gorgeous , Why , nature needs not what thou gorgeous wear ...
Seite 289
... nature of vice ? f the nature of justice ? g hypocrisy ? h patience ? 10 In Act IV Scene 7 Lear recovers from his madness in the company of Cordelia . a What , according to Kent in Act IV Scene 3 , has kept Lear from Cordelia until now ...
... nature of vice ? f the nature of justice ? g hypocrisy ? h patience ? 10 In Act IV Scene 7 Lear recovers from his madness in the company of Cordelia . a What , according to Kent in Act IV Scene 3 , has kept Lear from Cordelia until now ...
Inhalt
Introduction | 6 |
life plays theater verse | 8 |
date sources text | 15 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Act I Scene Alack Albany Albany Trust banished bastard blessing brother Burgundy Cordelia Curan daughters dead dear death Dover Duke of Albany Duke of Burgundy Duke of Cornwall Earl of Gloucester Edgar Edmund Exeunt Exit eyes farewell father Flibbertigibbet follow Fool fortune foul fiend France Gentleman give Gloucester's castle gods goes Goneril and Regan Grace hand hast hath hear heart heavens horse hundred knights husband James Burbage King Lear King of France kingdom knave lady Lear Let Lear's leave letter look lord madam master Messenger nature never night noble nuncle Officer Oswald pity play poor Poor Tom pray Prithee rascal rogue Servants Shakespeare sister sorrow speak speech stand stocks storm suffering sword tears tell thee there's thine things thou art traitor trumpet sound villain What's Who's wind words wretch