King LearYale University Press, 1 okt 2008 - 215 pagina's King Lear, one of Shakespeare's darkest and most savage plays, tells the story of the foolish and Job-like Lear, who divides his kingdom, as he does his affections, according to vanity and whim. Lear's failure as a father engulfs himself and his world in turmoil and tragedy. |
Vanuit het boek
Resultaten 1-5 van 28
Pagina xiv
... .I have tried,here,to use the printed seventeenth-century texts as a guide to both hearing and understanding what Shakespeare wrote. Since the original printed texts (there not being,as there never xiv about this book.
... .I have tried,here,to use the printed seventeenth-century texts as a guide to both hearing and understanding what Shakespeare wrote. Since the original printed texts (there not being,as there never xiv about this book.
Pagina xv
William Shakespeare. Since the original printed texts (there not being,as there never are for Shakespeare, any surviving manuscripts) are frequently careless as well as self-contradictory, I have been relatively free with the wording of ...
William Shakespeare. Since the original printed texts (there not being,as there never are for Shakespeare, any surviving manuscripts) are frequently careless as well as self-contradictory, I have been relatively free with the wording of ...
Pagina xxii
... never-never land of utter foolishness. And Goneril,oldest child and therefore the first to speak,winds up the rhetorical engines: Sir, I love you more than words can wield the matter, Dearer than eyesight,space,and liberty, Beyond what ...
... never-never land of utter foolishness. And Goneril,oldest child and therefore the first to speak,winds up the rhetorical engines: Sir, I love you more than words can wield the matter, Dearer than eyesight,space,and liberty, Beyond what ...
Pagina xxix
... never to know how distant each of the two texts is from Shakespeare's original, though that is hardly a unique bepuzzlement. On the evidence of the two texts themselves,there is no reason to believe that there are or ever were two ...
... never to know how distant each of the two texts is from Shakespeare's original, though that is hardly a unique bepuzzlement. On the evidence of the two texts themselves,there is no reason to believe that there are or ever were two ...
Pagina xxx
... never because he or she believes this or that word or phrase sounds better than what either of the two printed texts gives us.No matter how clever we are, we are not Shakespeare. The Folio editors were not Shakespeare either,but they ...
... never because he or she believes this or that word or phrase sounds better than what either of the two printed texts gives us.No matter how clever we are, we are not Shakespeare. The Folio editors were not Shakespeare either,but they ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Albany annotated answer appear Attendant Attendants bear better bring Burgundy comes Cordelia Cornwall daughters dead dear death dost doth Duke Edgar Edmund Elizabethan enter exeunt exit eyes face fall father fear find first follow Fool fortune France further give given Gloucester Gloucester’s gods gone Goneril grace hand hast hath head hear heart hold honor husband i’the keep Kent kind King King Lear Lear Lear’s less live look lord man’s matter means Messenger mind nature never night noble o’the once Oswald person play poor present reason Regan scene seek seems seen sense Servants Shakespeare sister speak speech stage stand sword tell texts thee thine thing thou thought turn University villain wear wish