The TempestGinn & Company, 1893 |
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Seite 4
... Common- wealth , as described in Act ii . , Scene 1 , were evidently taken from John Florio's translation of Montaigne , which was pub- lished in 1603. As the passage is curious in itself , and as it aptly illustrates the Poet's method ...
... Common- wealth , as described in Act ii . , Scene 1 , were evidently taken from John Florio's translation of Montaigne , which was pub- lished in 1603. As the passage is curious in itself , and as it aptly illustrates the Poet's method ...
Seite 5
... common ; no apparel but natural ; no manuring of lands ; no use of wine , corn , or metal the very words that import lying , falsehood , treason , dissimulation , covetousness , envy , detraction , and pardon , were never heard amongst ...
... common ; no apparel but natural ; no manuring of lands ; no use of wine , corn , or metal the very words that import lying , falsehood , treason , dissimulation , covetousness , envy , detraction , and pardon , were never heard amongst ...
Seite 8
... common with the play . In the year 1841 , however , Mr. Thoms called attention , in The New Monthly Magazine , to some remarkable coincidences between The Tempest and a German dramatic piece entitled The Beautiful Sidea , composed by ...
... common with the play . In the year 1841 , however , Mr. Thoms called attention , in The New Monthly Magazine , to some remarkable coincidences between The Tempest and a German dramatic piece entitled The Beautiful Sidea , composed by ...
Seite 9
... common source . Tieck gave it as his opinion that the German was derived from an English original now lost , to which Shakespeare was also indebted for the incidents of The Tempest . There the matter has to rest for the present . There ...
... common source . Tieck gave it as his opinion that the German was derived from an English original now lost , to which Shakespeare was also indebted for the incidents of The Tempest . There the matter has to rest for the present . There ...
Seite 13
... common Nature out of which both of them grew . This union of both kinds in one without hindrance to the distinctive qualities of either , this it is , I think , that chiefly distinguishes The Tempest from the Poet's other dramas . Some ...
... common Nature out of which both of them grew . This union of both kinds in one without hindrance to the distinctive qualities of either , this it is , I think , that chiefly distinguishes The Tempest from the Poet's other dramas . Some ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
15 cents 20 cents Adri Alon Alonso Anto Antonio Ariel awake Boatswain brave Caliban called cell Ceres charm Claribel Critical Notes Cymbeline daughter dear devil didst dost doth drink drown'd Duke of Milan dukedom Dyce e'er Enter Exeunt Exit eyes Faerie Queene father Ferd Ferdinand foot-note foul garments give Gonza Gonzalo Hamlet Hark hast hath heart Heavens hither island isle Julius Cæsar Juno King King Lear labour lord magic marsh-marigold master meaning Midsummer-Night's Dream Mira Miranda monster Naples nature nymphs old text on't original reads passage play Poet Poet's pr'ythee Prince probably Pros Prospero Queen Re-enter ARIEL scene Sebas Sebastian seems sense Shakespeare shalt ship sleep soul speak speech spirit staniels Steph Stephano strange sweet Sycorax Tempest thee thine thing thou art thou camest thought top-mast Trin Trinculo Tunis Upstaring vex'd William Aldis Wright wind wonder word