The Merchant of VeniceYale University Press, 01.01.2006 - 167 Seiten In this lively comedy of love and money in sixteenth-century Venice, Bassanio wants to impress the wealthy heiress Portia but lacks the necessary funds. He turns to his merchant friend, Antonio, who is forced to borrow from Shylock, a Jewish moneylender. |
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Seite xiv
... first-century minds have no business, in such mat- ters, overruling seventeenth-century ones.Whoever the compos- itors were, they were more or less Shakespeare's contemporaries, and we are not. Accordingly, when the original printed ...
... first-century minds have no business, in such mat- ters, overruling seventeenth-century ones.Whoever the compos- itors were, they were more or less Shakespeare's contemporaries, and we are not. Accordingly, when the original printed ...
Seite xvi
... first- century English have been added , in parentheses • Annotations of repeated words are not repeated . Explanations of the first instance of such common words are followed by the sign * . Readers may easily track down the first ...
... first- century English have been added , in parentheses • Annotations of repeated words are not repeated . Explanations of the first instance of such common words are followed by the sign * . Readers may easily track down the first ...
Seite xvii
... first printed in 1600. This quarto - sized 1 book , which has become the basic text for all modern editions , also gives us , directly and immediately via the volume's title page , a good idea of what the printer - publisher thought was ...
... first printed in 1600. This quarto - sized 1 book , which has become the basic text for all modern editions , also gives us , directly and immediately via the volume's title page , a good idea of what the printer - publisher thought was ...
Seite xxiii
... first of Shylock's two magnificently hu- manizing speeches, he speaks to Antonio, in the course of loan negotiations: Signior Antonio, many a time and oft In the Rialto you have rated me About my monies and my usances. Still have I ...
... first of Shylock's two magnificently hu- manizing speeches, he speaks to Antonio, in the course of loan negotiations: Signior Antonio, many a time and oft In the Rialto you have rated me About my monies and my usances. Still have I ...
Seite xxv
... first century, for there is absolutely nothing sexual in his part—Anto- nio ascends to the occasion. He can be loyal, he can be long- suffering—everything that he needs to be and, aside from the characteristic Shakespearean elegance ...
... first century, for there is absolutely nothing sexual in his part—Anto- nio ascends to the occasion. He can be loyal, he can be long- suffering—everything that he needs to be and, aside from the characteristic Shakespearean elegance ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
annotated Arragon Balthasar Barabas bear-baiting Belario Belmont blood bond Burton Raffel casket choose chooseth Christian clerk comes court daughter deed deserves divel doctor doth Duke Elizabethan English ENTER PORTIA EXEUNT eyes fair fair lady faith Falstaff father flesh fool forfeit fortune Genoa gentle give gold Gospel of John Gratiano Harold Bloom hast hath hear heart heaven honor house enter husband Jessica Jewish judge justice lady learnèd leave letter live look Lord Bassanio Lorenzo madam married Master Lancelot means Merchant of Venice mercy merry messenger mind Morocco Nerissa never night oath Old Gobbo play Portia pray thee Prince Quarto ring Salarino Salerio scene servant Shakespeare shalt Shylock Signior Antonio Solanio soul speak stand street enter swear sweet tell things thou three thousand ducats tonight true Tubal turn unto wife wish words Yahwist young