The TempestUniversity Society, 1623 - 142 Seiten |
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Seite 129
... passage in The Faithful Shepherdess , is thus quoted by Henley : - " Tell me , sweetest , What new service now is meetest For the satyre ; shall I stray In the middle ayre , and stay The sailing rack , or nimbly take Hold by the moone ...
... passage in The Faithful Shepherdess , is thus quoted by Henley : - " Tell me , sweetest , What new service now is meetest For the satyre ; shall I stray In the middle ayre , and stay The sailing rack , or nimbly take Hold by the moone ...
Seite 130
... : -That is , kissed or soothed the raging waves into silence or stillness . delicate touch of poetry that is quite lost , as the This is a passage is usually printed ; the line , The wild waves whist 130 Notes THE TEMPEST.
... : -That is , kissed or soothed the raging waves into silence or stillness . delicate touch of poetry that is quite lost , as the This is a passage is usually printed ; the line , The wild waves whist 130 Notes THE TEMPEST.
Seite 131
... , which corresponds exactly to the word of the original in both its signi- fications . " for no kind of traffic Would I admit ; no name of magistrate . " This passage is plainly taken from Montaigne's Essays , in 131 THE TEMPEST Notes.
... , which corresponds exactly to the word of the original in both its signi- fications . " for no kind of traffic Would I admit ; no name of magistrate . " This passage is plainly taken from Montaigne's Essays , in 131 THE TEMPEST Notes.
Seite 132
William Shakespeare. This passage is plainly taken from Montaigne's Essays , in which ( Book I. Chap . xxx . , Of the Caniballes ) , according to Florio's translation , published in 1603 , this passage occurs : - 66 ' It is a nation ...
William Shakespeare. This passage is plainly taken from Montaigne's Essays , in which ( Book I. Chap . xxx . , Of the Caniballes ) , according to Florio's translation , published in 1603 , this passage occurs : - 66 ' It is a nation ...
Seite 134
... passage : " I my- self have heard strange things of this kind of tree ; namely , in regard of the bird Phoenix . . for it was assured unto me , that the said bird died with that tree , and revived of itself as the tree sprung again ...
... passage : " I my- self have heard strange things of this kind of tree ; namely , in regard of the bird Phoenix . . for it was assured unto me , that the said bird died with that tree , and revived of itself as the tree sprung again ...
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Alon Alonso Boatswain Book brave bring brother Caliban camest cell Ceres character charm daughter devil Discase doth drowned Duke of Milan dukedom e'er earth enchanted Enter Ariel Exeunt Exit eyes father Ferdinand fish folios foul garments give goitre Gonzalo grace hang Hark hath hear heaven HENRIE CONDELL hither honour human island isle JOHN HEMINGE Juno King of Naples king's live lord Lord Mulgrave magic master mind Miranda monster nature never nymphs o'er play Poet poetical prithee probably Pros Prospero Re-enter Ariel scene Sebastian and Antonio Setebos Shake Shakespeare ship sing sleep speak spirit stand Stephano strange Sycorax tell Tempest thee There's thine thing thou art thou canst thou didst thou dost thou hast Trin Trinculo Tunis twilled wench WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE wind word yare ΙΟ