The Misfortunes of Arthur, Utgave 14E. Felber, 1900 - 265 sider |
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Side
... Play . II . The Sources of the Play III . The Authors 1 17 53 IV . The Verse 60 V. The Editions of the Play . Its Spelling and Punctuation . VI . Textual Corrections VII . The Text . Some Orthographical Signs Slips 96 100 105 • VIII ...
... Play . II . The Sources of the Play III . The Authors 1 17 53 IV . The Verse 60 V. The Editions of the Play . Its Spelling and Punctuation . VI . Textual Corrections VII . The Text . Some Orthographical Signs Slips 96 100 105 • VIII ...
Side
... lending , for collation , his rare and precious copy , which , next to the text in the British Museum , is the only quarto known to be in existence . London . August , 1900 . Y I. Importance of the Play . The first question that Preface ...
... lending , for collation , his rare and precious copy , which , next to the text in the British Museum , is the only quarto known to be in existence . London . August , 1900 . Y I. Importance of the Play . The first question that Preface ...
Side 1
Thomas Hughes Harvey Carson Grumbine. I. Importance of the Play . The first question that is likely to occur to the reader of this edition of " The Misfortunes of Arthur " we may assume to be relative to the importance of the play ...
Thomas Hughes Harvey Carson Grumbine. I. Importance of the Play . The first question that is likely to occur to the reader of this edition of " The Misfortunes of Arthur " we may assume to be relative to the importance of the play ...
Side 2
... play , then , lies in the import- ance of the effects to which it constitutes a cause . It is a link in a chain . The link may have some importance per se ; on the other hand , it may derive most of its importance from the chain , or ...
... play , then , lies in the import- ance of the effects to which it constitutes a cause . It is a link in a chain . The link may have some importance per se ; on the other hand , it may derive most of its importance from the chain , or ...
Side 4
... play or in retarding it . We suspect that Seneca intended his plays to be read and not acted . They are philosophical orations cast in the form of iambics and recited before fashionable audiences of " Roman ladies and gentlemen ...
... play or in retarding it . We suspect that Seneca intended his plays to be read and not acted . They are philosophical orations cast in the form of iambics and recited before fashionable audiences of " Roman ladies and gentlemen ...
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
accent Agamemnon Alliteration ARTH Arturus autem blood bloud Brit Brytaines CADO Cador caesura Chaunce Chor Chorus Collier D.-H comma CONA Conan Crowne dare death doth drama Duke Enuie Epil Euen euery fame farre Fates feare foes forreine Fortune Fulb furies GAWI Geoffrey Geoffrey of Monmouth ghost Gilla giue Gorboduc Gorlois griefe Grumbine Gueneuora GVEN hand hate hath haue Heauens Herc Heywood's translation Hippolytus hope Ibid Intr iust King kyng Arthur Le Morte Darthur leaue lines liue loue minde Misfortunes of Arthur MORD Mordred mought neuer Nicholas Trotte peace Pendragon Pictes plague play Prince quod rage Realme Repr reuenge Saxons scene seéke selfe Seneca Shakspere sinnes Sire Sonne Spens Spenser Soc'y Reprint Studley's translation Subiects sword syr Mordred thee thenne Thomas Hughes thou Thyestes tragedy Troades vnto vpon winne woonted wound wrath wrong yeelde
Populære avsnitt
Side 254 - I'll not shed her blood ; Nor scar that whiter skin of hers than snow, And smooth as monumental alabaster. Yet she must die, else she'll betray more men. Put out the light, and then put out the light.
Side 1 - The best in this kind are but shadows ; and the worst are no worse, if imagination amend them.
Side 254 - Rasch tritt der Tod den Menschen an, Es ist ihm keine Frist gegeben, Es stürzt ihn mitten in der Bahn, Es reißt ihn fort vom vollen Leben, Bereitet oder nicht, zu gehen, Er muß vor seinen Richter stehen!
Side 224 - Quae medicamenta non sanant, ferrum sanat, quae ferrum non sanat, ignis sanat" („Was Arzneien nicht heilen, heilt das Eisen; was Eisen nicht heilt, heilt das Feuer").
Side 201 - ... the one bearing in her hand a snake, the other a whip, and the third a burning firebrand, each driving before them a king and a queen, which, moved by furies, unnaturally had slain their own children.
Side 201 - ... three Furies, Alecto, Megera and Ctesiphone, 6 clad in black garmentes sprinkled with bloud and flames, their bodies girt with snakes, their beds spred with serpentes in-stead of heare ; the one bearing in her hand a snake, the other a whip, and the third a burning firebrand ; ech...
Side 153 - In so extreame a sort, as is too strange : Let right and iustice rule with rigours aide, And worke his wracke at length, although too late : That damning Lawes, so damned by the Lawes, Hee may receiue his deepe deserued doome.
Side 253 - That a sorrow's crown of sorrow is remembering happier things".
Side 203 - Perge, detestabilis umbra, et penates impios furiis age. certetur omni scelere et alterna vice stringatur crisis ; ne sit irarum modus pudorve, mentes caecus instiget furor, rabies parentum duret et longum nefas eat in nepotes ; nee vacet cuiquam vetus odisse crimen — semper oriatur novum, 3O nee unum in uno, dumque punitur scelus, crescat.
Side 16 - Art, that could scarcely latinize their necke-verse if they should have neede ; yet English Seneca read by candle light yeeldes manie good sentences, as Bloud is a begger, and so foorth ; and, if you intreate him faire in a frostie morning, he will affoord you whole Hamlets, I should say handfulls of tragical speaches.