TempestMacmillan & Company, 1864 - 119 Seiten |
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... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
Seite vi
... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
Seite viii
... mind when he wrote . Shakespeare's plays cannot be read and understood by the light of that almost intuitive knowledge of our mother tongue which we gather from common conversation . Each sentence be- comes , like a sentence in ...
... mind when he wrote . Shakespeare's plays cannot be read and understood by the light of that almost intuitive knowledge of our mother tongue which we gather from common conversation . Each sentence be- comes , like a sentence in ...
Seite xvii
... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
... minds for any intellectual work which they may afterwards be called upon to do . Prospero is not liable to the charge of blundering or exaggeration when he tells Caliban that before Caliban knew the use of words he did not know his own ...
Seite xvii
... mind when he wrote . Shakespeare's plays cannot be read and understood by the light of that almost intuitive knowledge of our mother tongue which we gather from common conversation . Each sentence be- comes , like a sentence in ...
... mind when he wrote . Shakespeare's plays cannot be read and understood by the light of that almost intuitive knowledge of our mother tongue which we gather from common conversation . Each sentence be- comes , like a sentence in ...
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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