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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... Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans by the Greek writer Plutarch, finely translated into English from the French by Sir Thomas North in 1579, provided much of the narrative material, and also a mass of verbal detail, for his plays ...
... lives forces a reassessment that makes them see the everyday world as if through new eyes. In such circumstances, even the most commonplace object suddenly appears miraculous. 'How lush and lusty the grass looks!' exclaims Gonzalo (II ...
... lives that they could not have achieved at home. Their journey to the margins puts a question mark over the society from which they come, and causes a radical reassessment of the values by which they live and the kind of life to which ...
... lives at the edge of Europe, Prospero conjures up a show redolent of the most expensive pleasures seen in any Italian court, albeit one which, as in all the masques performed at the Jacobean court, proves as evanescent as it is glorious ...
... lives and the inability of even the most determined persons to control their own destiny. In Virgil's Latin epic The Aeneid – not a romance, but related to the form – the hero Aeneas, whose destiny is to found the Roman empire, is ...