Shakespeare, the Roman PlaysHollis & Carter, 1963 - 288 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 50.
Pàgina 118
... elements of rivalry and division come into their own . Antony , his impulse towards Rome exhausted , turns his wavering thoughts to the East , where Ventidius replaces him on the battlefields of Syria ( III . i ) . Octavia leaves her ...
... elements of rivalry and division come into their own . Antony , his impulse towards Rome exhausted , turns his wavering thoughts to the East , where Ventidius replaces him on the battlefields of Syria ( III . i ) . Octavia leaves her ...
Pàgina 199
... elements upon which love itself has been based and which are now in the process of returning to the earth from which they sprang : - I am fire and air ; my other elements I give to baser life . [ V. ii . 291. ] - On the edge of death ...
... elements upon which love itself has been based and which are now in the process of returning to the earth from which they sprang : - I am fire and air ; my other elements I give to baser life . [ V. ii . 291. ] - On the edge of death ...
Pàgina 203
... elements implies ; but , just as earth and slime can be quickened into life , briefly and elusively indeed , but none the less truly , by the action upon them of fire and air , so the very elements of waste and vanity which nurtured ...
... elements implies ; but , just as earth and slime can be quickened into life , briefly and elusively indeed , but none the less truly , by the action upon them of fire and air , so the very elements of waste and vanity which nurtured ...
Altres edicions - Mostra-ho tot
Frases i termes més freqüents
action affirmation Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appeal assertion attitude Aufidius balance blood Brutus Caesar Cassius Charmian Cominius confirms contemplate contrast Coriolanus cynicism death decision Decius dramatic effect Egypt elements emotion enemies Enobarbus episode exaltation exchange expression eyes fact feeling finally follows force fortunes friends Fulvia generosity gesture gods hath heart hero hero's honour human illusion implied imposes intensity intimate irony judgement Julius Caesar King Lear lead Lepidus Macbeth Marcius Mark Antony Menenius mood moral nature nobility noble Octavius once outburst passion patra patrician phrase play play's plea Plutarch poetry political Pompey present reaction ready realism reality reflection reply resolution response revealing rhetorical rival Roman Rome ruin scene seeks sense Shakespeare shame Sicinius situation speak speaker's speech spirit stresses thee thou tion tragedy tragic tribunes true truth turn typical unnatural utterance Volscian Volumnia weakness whilst words