The TempestWashington Square Press, 1994 - 218 Seiten "Shakespeare's valedictory play is also one of his most poetical and magical. The story involves the spirit Ariel, the savage Caliban, and Prospero, the banished Duke of Milan, now a wizard living on a remote island who uses his magic to shipwreck a party of ex-compatriots. This extensively annotated version of The Tempest makes the play completely accessible to readers in the twenty-first century." "Linguist and translator Burton Raffel offers generous help with vocabulary, pronunciation, and prosody and provides alternative readings of phrases and lines. His on-page annotations give readers all the tools they need to comprehend the play and begin to explore its many possible interpretations. Raffel provides an introductory essay, and in a concluding essay, Harold Bloom examines the characters Prospero and Caliban."--BOOK JACKET. |
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... scene like that of the Harpy - king confrontation in 3.3 or that of the presentation of the masque in 4.1 , in both of which scenes implied stage action vitally affects our response to the play . It is immensely rewarding to work ...
... scene like that of the Harpy - king confrontation in 3.3 or that of the presentation of the masque in 4.1 , in both of which scenes implied stage action vitally affects our response to the play . It is immensely rewarding to work ...
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... scene 4 to scene 5 , but they are represented as having moved between scenes from the street that leads to Capulet's house into Capulet's house itself . The new location is signaled in part by the appearance onstage of Capulet's ...
... scene 4 to scene 5 , but they are represented as having moved between scenes from the street that leads to Capulet's house into Capulet's house itself . The new location is signaled in part by the appearance onstage of Capulet's ...
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... scene are , with rare exceptions , placed so that they immediately precede the characters ' participation in the scene , even though these entrances may appear somewhat earlier in the early printed texts . Whenever we move a stage ...
... scene are , with rare exceptions , placed so that they immediately precede the characters ' participation in the scene , even though these entrances may appear somewhat earlier in the early printed texts . Whenever we move a stage ...
Inhalt
Editors Preface | |
Shakespeares The Tempest | |
The Tempest | |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actors ADRIAN Aeneas Aeneid Argonautica ARIEL PROSPERO ARIEL Song audience awake BOATSWAIN brave brother Caliban cam'st cell Ceres charms colonization Daedalus daughter devil didst dost doth drink drowned Duke of Milan dukedom e'er earlier in F edition English Enter Ariel exits father fellows Ferdinand Folger Library Folger Shakespeare Library Folio foul give Globe GONZALO Hark Harpy hast hath hear honor invisible island isle Juno king of Naples London longer note lord magic masque master maze meaning MIRANDA modern monster Mowat narrative nymphs o'er performed perhaps Philip Henslowe pinched play's playhouses present Press prithee Proverbial quartos Queen readers reading scene SEBASTIAN ANTONIO sentence servant Shake Shakespeare's Language Shakespeare's plays shalt ship sleep speak speare's speech spirit stage direction STEPHANO story strange Sycorax tell Tempest texts theaters thee thine tion Trinculo Tunis voyage William Shakespeare wind word wrack