The TempestPenguin UK, 29.10.2015 - 240 Seiten 'The magic in The Tempest is real ... It contains a great many unanswered questions' Margaret Atwood |
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... and John Fletcher; known in its own time as All is True) 1613 Cardenio (by Shakespeare and Fletcher; lost) 1613 The Two Noble Kinsmen (by Shakespeare and Fletcher) 1613–14 Introduction MIRANDA O wonder! How many goodly creatures are there.
... Miranda's amazement at seeing her first group of European men is the moment at which the play's interest in marvels and strange sights reaches its culmination. Awe-struck by people from a western world that she encounters literally for ...
William Shakespeare. disagreement sounds more decisive, making Miranda appear naively innocent, her optimism a cruel illusion. After all, it is not a new world which she is discovering but the same old Europe. Or sometimes the voices of ...
... Miranda is a source of wonder is for Stephano and Sebastian an opportunity for political insurrection, and for Trinculo and Antonio – both of whom see Caliban as a 'strange fish' that may be 'marketable' at home (II.2.27, V.1.266) ...
... Miranda's 'brave new world' is that such an apostrophe would normally be directed by travellers to the exotic sights they had discovered, not be applied to the travellers themselves. What you take to be wonderful turns out to depend on ...