TempestMacmillan & Company, 1864 - 119 Seiten |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 16
Seite xii
... foul witch Sycorax , keenly alive to all that gratifies or offends the senses , delighting to sport in the sunbeam and to live merrily under the blossom which hangs on the bough , without any serious occupation , full of gaiety , humour ...
... foul witch Sycorax , keenly alive to all that gratifies or offends the senses , delighting to sport in the sunbeam and to live merrily under the blossom which hangs on the bough , without any serious occupation , full of gaiety , humour ...
Seite 7
... foul play had we , that we came from thence ? 60 Or blessed was ' t we did ? Pros . Both , both , my girl : By foul play , as thou say'st , were we SCENE II . ] THE TEMPEST .
... foul play had we , that we came from thence ? 60 Or blessed was ' t we did ? Pros . Both , both , my girl : By foul play , as thou say'st , were we SCENE II . ] THE TEMPEST .
Seite 8
William Shakespeare. By foul play , as thou say'st , were we heaved thence ; But blessedly holp hither . Mir . O , my heart bleeds To think o ' the teen that I have turned you to , Which is from my remembrance ! Please you , farther . 65 ...
William Shakespeare. By foul play , as thou say'st , were we heaved thence ; But blessedly holp hither . Mir . O , my heart bleeds To think o ' the teen that I have turned you to , Which is from my remembrance ! Please you , farther . 65 ...
Seite 10
... foul ends . In few , they hurried us aboard a bark , Bore us some leagues to sea ; where they prepared A rotten carcass of a boat , not rigged , Nor tackle , sail , nor mast ; the very rats Instinctively had quit it : there they hoist ...
... foul ends . In few , they hurried us aboard a bark , Bore us some leagues to sea ; where they prepared A rotten carcass of a boat , not rigged , Nor tackle , sail , nor mast ; the very rats Instinctively had quit it : there they hoist ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjective afeard Alon Alonzo anacoluthon aposiopesis Ben Jonson beseech Boats boatswain brave brother Caliban called cell Ceres charm chough comfort conscience cramps daughter dead devil Dido discase doth drowned Duke of Milan dukedom English Exeunt Exit expression eyes fairies father Ferdinand fish follow foul Gonzalo grace grammatical Greek and Latin hang Hark hath hear hither honour imperative mood island isle King of Naples labour language Line lord Lord Balmerinoch master means properly mercy metaphor Miranda monster nature noble nymphs play poetical pray prithee Pros Prospero PROSPERO'S cell Re-enter ARIEL reason remember SCENE Sebastian and Antonio sentence Shakespeare's shore sing sleep speak spirit Stephano strange supposed Sycorax syllable tell TEMPEST thee There's thine thing thou art thou didst thou hast Thou liest thoughts tongue Trin Trinculo Tunis understood verb winds word