Romeo and JulietN.S.W. Department of Education Division of Guidance & Special Education., 1904 - 121 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 5 de 18.
Pàgina vi
... lovers into each other's arms with scarcely a moment's pause , and lastly , so ill - fated that death follows straightway upon the ecstasy of union . Here , more than anywhere else , has Shakespeare shown in all its intensity the dual ...
... lovers into each other's arms with scarcely a moment's pause , and lastly , so ill - fated that death follows straightway upon the ecstasy of union . Here , more than anywhere else , has Shakespeare shown in all its intensity the dual ...
Pàgina vii
... lovers and the haters Shakespeare has placed Friar Laurence , one of his most delightful em- bodiments of reason . Such figures are rare in his plays , as they are in life , but ought not to be over- looked , as they have been , for ...
... lovers and the haters Shakespeare has placed Friar Laurence , one of his most delightful em- bodiments of reason . Such figures are rare in his plays , as they are in life , but ought not to be over- looked , as they have been , for ...
Pàgina viii
... lovers — the sleeping - potion administered to Juliet . This Shakespeare simply accepted from his original , with his usual indifference to external detail . III . All Romeo and Juliet , as a drama , still represents in many ways the ...
... lovers — the sleeping - potion administered to Juliet . This Shakespeare simply accepted from his original , with his usual indifference to external detail . III . All Romeo and Juliet , as a drama , still represents in many ways the ...
Pàgina x
... may leap unseen to her arms ; for— ' Lovers can see to do their amorous rites By their own beauties ; or , if love be blind , It best agrees with night . ' Milton annexes the thought and the turn of phrase ; X ROMEO AND JULIET .
... may leap unseen to her arms ; for— ' Lovers can see to do their amorous rites By their own beauties ; or , if love be blind , It best agrees with night . ' Milton annexes the thought and the turn of phrase ; X ROMEO AND JULIET .
Pàgina xi
... lovers who have secretly passed the night together , between their reluctance to part and their dread of discovery — a struggle which sets them debating whether the light they see comes from the sun or the moon , and whether it is the ...
... lovers who have secretly passed the night together , between their reluctance to part and their dread of discovery — a struggle which sets them debating whether the light they see comes from the sun or the moon , and whether it is the ...
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Frases i termes més freqüents
Alack apothecary art thou Arthur Brooke banished beauty BENVOLIO breath cell County Paris cousin dead dear death dost doth Enter CAPULET Enter JULIET Enter ROMEO Epithalamium Exeunt Exit eyes fair fair Verona faith Farewell father fear flower gentleman GEORGE BRANDES give gone grave grief hand hate hath hear heart heaven hence hither holy kinsman kiss LADY CAPULET light lips live look lord love's lovers Madam maid maidenhead Mantua marriage married Mercutio Midsummer Night's Dream mistress Montague ne'er night NURSE o'er peace Petrarch poison pray prince quarrel Queen Mab Romeo and Juliet Rosaline SCENE Shakespeare slain sorrow soul speak stand stay sweet tears tell thee thine thou art thou hast thou wilt Thursday to-morrow to-night Tybalt Verona vex'd villain watch weep wife Wilt thou word young