Shakespeare's Comedy of LoveRoutledge, 11. 10. 2013 - Počet stran: 288 First published in 1987. |
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Výsledky 1-5 z 17
Strana 1
... Ephesus meets Antipholus of Syracuse for the first time, and rebukes him for not coming home to dinner. Antipholus ignores the rebuke (which means nothing to him) and turns to a more urgent matter: ANTIPHOLUS s: Stop in your wind, sir ...
... Ephesus meets Antipholus of Syracuse for the first time, and rebukes him for not coming home to dinner. Antipholus ignores the rebuke (which means nothing to him) and turns to a more urgent matter: ANTIPHOLUS s: Stop in your wind, sir ...
Strana 2
... Ephesus in quite a different way: They say this town is full of cozenage ; As, nimble j ugglers that deceive the eye, Dark-working sorcerers that change the mind, Soul-killing witches that deform the body, Disguised cheaters, prating ...
... Ephesus in quite a different way: They say this town is full of cozenage ; As, nimble j ugglers that deceive the eye, Dark-working sorcerers that change the mind, Soul-killing witches that deform the body, Disguised cheaters, prating ...
Strana 6
... Ephesus is (like his wife) the recipient of much good advice about the necessity of patience — from his friends (111. i. 85— 106), from the officer who arrests him (Iv. iv. 18) — in short, from people who do not really share his ...
... Ephesus is (like his wife) the recipient of much good advice about the necessity of patience — from his friends (111. i. 85— 106), from the officer who arrests him (Iv. iv. 18) — in short, from people who do not really share his ...
Strana 7
... Ephesus, as for the rest of the native population (and initially for the audience) Ephesus is the familiar seaport town of Plautine comedy, a small world of commerce and domesticity, where, as E. M. W. Tillyard puts it, 'everyone knows ...
... Ephesus, as for the rest of the native population (and initially for the audience) Ephesus is the familiar seaport town of Plautine comedy, a small world of commerce and domesticity, where, as E. M. W. Tillyard puts it, 'everyone knows ...
Strana 8
... Ephesus appears to have occupied, when the action begins, a solid and respectable place. Angelo the goldsmith describes him as 'Of very reverent reputation . . . / Of credit infinite, highly belov'd' (V. i. 5—6). His marriage, whatever ...
... Ephesus appears to have occupied, when the action begins, a solid and respectable place. Angelo the goldsmith describes him as 'Of very reverent reputation . . . / Of credit infinite, highly belov'd' (V. i. 5—6). His marriage, whatever ...
Obsah
1 | |
2 The Two Gentlemen of Verona | 21 |
3 The Taming of the Shrew | 41 |
4 Loves Labours Lost | 63 |
5 A Midsummer Nights Dream | 89 |
6 The Merchant of Venice | 117 |
7 Much Ado About Nothing | 151 |
8 As You Like It | 185 |
9 Twelfth Night | 221 |
beyond Twelfth Night | 255 |
Index | 269 |
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Antonio appears artifice audience awareness Bassanio Beatrice and Benedick behaviour Belmont Berowne Berowne’s Bianca Cesario characters Claudio clowns Comedy of Errors comic convention courtship detachment disguise dislocation Don Pedro doth dramatic idiom Dromio Duke effect Ephesus experience eyes fairies fantasy father feeling figure final scene finally find first scene formal Ganymede Gentlemen of Verona give harmony hath Hermia Hero idea joke Julia Katherina kind lady London lord Love’s Labour’s Lost lovers Malvolio marriage Merchant of Venice Midsummer Night’s Dream mind mockery nature Olivia Orlando Orsino pattern Petruchio play’s plot Portia Proteus Proteus’s reality reflects rhyme role romantic love Rosalind satiric seen sense Shakespeare Shakespeare’s comedies Shakespearian comedy Shrew Shylock Silvius simply Sir Andrew Sir Toby speech sport story stylized suggests Taming thee Theseus thou throughout the play Touchstone Twelfth Night Venice Viola vision words