King LearYale University Press, 1 באוק׳ 2008 - 215 עמודים 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. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 1-5 מתוך 16
עמוד xiii
... mind responsible for that punctuating hears the text. And twenty-first-century minds have no business, in such matters,overruling seventeenth-century ones.Whoever the compositors were,they were more or less Shakespeare's contemporaries ...
... mind responsible for that punctuating hears the text. And twenty-first-century minds have no business, in such matters,overruling seventeenth-century ones.Whoever the compositors were,they were more or less Shakespeare's contemporaries ...
עמוד xxx
... minds,and in critical commentary,are here restored,either in whole or in part. Act 4,scene 3,is deleted in the Folio,a readily understandable omission for what is plainly a performance-oriented text.This edition, however, being a ...
... minds,and in critical commentary,are here restored,either in whole or in part. Act 4,scene 3,is deleted in the Folio,a readily understandable omission for what is plainly a performance-oriented text.This edition, however, being a ...
עמוד 18
... mind* absent a 229 for I want because I lack* 230 purpose not do not intend to do 231 fault,failing 232 deed,action 233 still-soliciting always seeking/urging/importuning 234 ruined,destroyed 235 of 236 story,tale 18 act 1 • scene 1.
... mind* absent a 229 for I want because I lack* 230 purpose not do not intend to do 231 fault,failing 232 deed,action 233 still-soliciting always seeking/urging/importuning 234 ruined,destroyed 235 of 236 story,tale 18 act 1 • scene 1.
עמוד 24
הגעת למגבלת הצפייה עבור ספר זה מדוע?.
הגעת למגבלת הצפייה עבור ספר זה מדוע?.
עמוד 32
הגעת למגבלת הצפייה עבור ספר זה מדוע?.
הגעת למגבלת הצפייה עבור ספר זה מדוע?.
מהדורות אחרות - הצג הכל
מונחים וביטויים נפוצים
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