The TempestD.C. Heath & Company, 1916 - 166 sidor |
Från bokens innehåll
Resultat 1-5 av 19
Sida 18
... meaning , but wouldst gabble like A thing most brutish , I endow'd thy purposes With words that made them known . But thy vile race , Though thou didst learn , had that in ' t which good natures 359 Could not abide to be with ...
... meaning , but wouldst gabble like A thing most brutish , I endow'd thy purposes With words that made them known . But thy vile race , Though thou didst learn , had that in ' t which good natures 359 Could not abide to be with ...
Sida 33
... meaning in thy snores . Ant . I am more serious than my custom : you Must be so too , if heed me ; which to do Trebles thee o'er . Seb . Well , I am standing water . Ant . I teach you how to flow . Seb . Hereditary sloth instructs me ...
... meaning in thy snores . Ant . I am more serious than my custom : you Must be so too , if heed me ; which to do Trebles thee o'er . Seb . Well , I am standing water . Ant . I teach you how to flow . Seb . Hereditary sloth instructs me ...
Sida 89
... meaning of or died out , it seems to have been combined with ere for the sake of emphasis . Cf. Abbott , § 131 . 13. fraughting souls , the souls who composed the fraught or freight . 14. piteous , pitying . 15. O , woe the day ...
... meaning of or died out , it seems to have been combined with ere for the sake of emphasis . Cf. Abbott , § 131 . 13. fraughting souls , the souls who composed the fraught or freight . 14. piteous , pitying . 15. O , woe the day ...
Sida 92
... meaning of this passage is clear : " Like one who , by repeating a lie , has made his memory such a sinner against truth that he has come to believe his own invention . " ( Malone compares Bacon's account of Perkin Warbeck in his ...
... meaning of this passage is clear : " Like one who , by repeating a lie , has made his memory such a sinner against truth that he has come to believe his own invention . " ( Malone compares Bacon's account of Perkin Warbeck in his ...
Sida 93
... one . Had Shakespeare written " boat " ( as Rowe conjectured ) , it would not have been cor- rupted into the more unusual word . It is evident , however , ་ 66 66 that butt cannot here have its modern meaning SCENE TWO ] 93 NOTES.
... one . Had Shakespeare written " boat " ( as Rowe conjectured ) , it would not have been cor- rupted into the more unusual word . It is evident , however , ་ 66 66 that butt cannot here have its modern meaning SCENE TWO ] 93 NOTES.
Andra upplagor - Visa alla
Vanliga ord och fraser
Abbott Alon Alonso Antonio Antony and Cleopatra Ariel beat Boatswain brave brother Cæsar Caliban camest Ceres charm command Cotgrave daughter devil doth Dowden drowned Duke of Milan dukedom enchanted Enter ARIEL Exeunt eyes father Ferdinand Ff reading fish Folio foot foul fresh give Gonzalo Hark hath hear island isle Julius Cæsar Juno King of Naples lord masque master meaning Midsummer Night's Dream Miranda monster nature never nymphs o'er passage phrase play plot plural pray prince princess Prithee probably Pros Prospero PROSPERO's cell queen quotes Re-enter ARIEL reference roar scene Sebastian sense Setebos Shake Shakespeare ship shore sing sleep speak spirit Stephano storm strange stress suggested sweet Sycorax syllable tell Tempest thee thine thing thou art thou hast thou shalt thought thyself tion Trin Trinculo verb vowel wind Winter's Tale word Wright