Shakespeare's Self-portrait: Passages from His WorkMacmillan, 1985 - 187 Seiten |
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Seite 52
... tale Now seems to it . Your patience this allowing , I turn my glass and give my scene such growing As you had slept between . . . Of this allow , If ever you have spent time worse ere now : If never , yet that Time himself doth say He ...
... tale Now seems to it . Your patience this allowing , I turn my glass and give my scene such growing As you had slept between . . . Of this allow , If ever you have spent time worse ere now : If never , yet that Time himself doth say He ...
Seite 119
... Tale , Iv.2 . – Whether it like me or no , I am a courtier . Seest thou not the air of the Court in these enfoldings ? Hath not my gait in it the measure of the Court ? Receives not thy nose Court - odour from me ? Reflect I not on thy ...
... Tale , Iv.2 . – Whether it like me or no , I am a courtier . Seest thou not the air of the Court in these enfoldings ? Hath not my gait in it the measure of the Court ? Receives not thy nose Court - odour from me ? Reflect I not on thy ...
Seite 140
... Tale ' , which provided some material for A Midsummer Night's Dream . ] Before these bastard signs of fair were born , Or durst inhabit on a living brow : Before the golden tresses of the dead , The right of sepulchres , were shorn away ...
... Tale ' , which provided some material for A Midsummer Night's Dream . ] Before these bastard signs of fair were born , Or durst inhabit on a living brow : Before the golden tresses of the dead , The right of sepulchres , were shorn away ...
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Shakespeare's Self-portrait: Passages from His Work William Shakespeare,Alfred Leslie Rowse Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1985 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actor appears bear better body comes Company Court dark doth Dream early ears Elizabethan eyes face fair fall fear fortune gentle gentleman give Hamlet hand hang hast hath head hear heart heaven Henry Herne the Hunter honour hope horse issue John King lady leave light live London look lord Love's Labour's Lost married means Measure Merry Wives Midsummer mind nature never Night observe play players poet poor Queen reference reflects Richard seen Shakespeare sometime Sonnet soul sound Southampton speak spirit stage stand Stratford sweet Tale tell theatre thee thine things thou thought Troilus and Cressida true turned Twelfth unto verse Wives of Windsor write written young