The Supernatural in ShakespeareJ. Ouseley, 1908 - 158 pagina's |
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Pagina 13
... once reverts to her womanly pleadings : " Do not go forth to - day . fear Call it my That keeps you in the house , and not your own . " The criticism is too just to have been conceived on the spur of the moment . It is evident that she ...
... once reverts to her womanly pleadings : " Do not go forth to - day . fear Call it my That keeps you in the house , and not your own . " The criticism is too just to have been conceived on the spur of the moment . It is evident that she ...
Pagina 18
... once an example and a definition of this.— 66 2ND CITIZEN : Truly the souls of men are full of dread : Ye cannot reason al- most with a man That looks not heavily and full of fear . divine instinct " 3RD CITIZEN : By a divine men's 18.
... once an example and a definition of this.— 66 2ND CITIZEN : Truly the souls of men are full of dread : Ye cannot reason al- most with a man That looks not heavily and full of fear . divine instinct " 3RD CITIZEN : By a divine men's 18.
Pagina 42
... once : " Ecstasy ! My pulse as yours does temperately keep time , And makes as healthful music Mother , for love of grace · Lay not a flattering unction to your soul That not your trespass , but my madness speaks . " " And the reader is ...
... once : " Ecstasy ! My pulse as yours does temperately keep time , And makes as healthful music Mother , for love of grace · Lay not a flattering unction to your soul That not your trespass , but my madness speaks . " " And the reader is ...
Pagina 61
... once and for all , from fear and suspicion . He forgot , as such men do , that Banquo's body might die , and rot , and return to dust , and yet the spirit still live to re- buke , as heretofore , his guilty soul . In Act III . , 2 , he ...
... once and for all , from fear and suspicion . He forgot , as such men do , that Banquo's body might die , and rot , and return to dust , and yet the spirit still live to re- buke , as heretofore , his guilty soul . In Act III . , 2 , he ...
Pagina 80
Helen Hinton Stewart. have lowered the tone of his character . What was once the self - confidence of con- scious power has changed into vain- glorious boasting . Appreciation of merited praise has degenerated into love of the grossest ...
Helen Hinton Stewart. have lowered the tone of his character . What was once the self - confidence of con- scious power has changed into vain- glorious boasting . Appreciation of merited praise has degenerated into love of the grossest ...
Overige edities - Alles bekijken
The Supernatural in Shakespeare. By Helen Hinton Stewart Helen Hinton Stewart Volledige weergave - 1908 |
Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
Andromache Antony apparitions appear Ariel Auberon Banquo beauty blood brain Brutus Caliban Cassius character charm choughs crime dead death devil divine drama dramatist dread dream earth ecstasy elves evil spirits exclaim eyes fairies fairy-land fancy father fear feel fight Fleance genius Ghost of Cæsar ghost-lore grace guilty Hamlet Hastings hath heart heaven Hecuba hero Hippolyta Horatio human Ides of March ignorant ill chances imagination instinct intellect Juliet Julius Cæsar King King of Navarre Lady Macbeth lord lovers LUCIUS magic merry Methought mind moon mortal murder nature Nature's night noble Oberon Octavius Ovid palace Philippi presentiments Prospero Puck Queen reason Richard Richard III Romeo royal scene secret seems Shake sleep sleepers soul sprite suggests SUPERNATURAL IN SHAKESPEARE Sycorax Tempest tent terrible thee Theseus thing thou art thought Titania tragedy truth turn vision wife witch words