| G. Wilsin Knight - 2002 - 368 str.
...with Miranda: Rt-enter Ariel, invisible, playing and singing: Ferdinand following. Ariel's Song. Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands: Courtsied when you have and kiss'd The wild waves whist, Foot it featly here and there; And, sweet sprites, the burthen bear. Hark,... | |
| A. L. Rowse - 2003 - 480 str.
...that appear in Hakluyt, lodged in the poets' minds : Drayton remembered them too.) Or Ariel's Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands : Courtsied when you have and kissed The wild waves whist . . . It may not be fanciful to see something of the influence in Timon, too : the spendthrift who,... | |
| Ross W. Duffin - 2004 - 536 str.
...ARIEL: Song. Come unto these yellow sands, and then take hands: Curtsied when you have, and kiss'd the wild waves whist: Foot it featly here, and there, and sweet Sprites bear the burthen. Burthen dispersedly. Hark, hark, bow wow: the watch-Dogs bark, bow-wow ARIEL: Hark,... | |
| Geoffrey H. Hartman - 2007 - 351 str.
..."trifling" song from The Tempest: Ariel's Song Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands: Curtsied when you have, and kissed The wild waves whist: Foot it featly here and there, And sweet sprites bear The burthen . . . Hark! Hark! Burthen [dispersedly]. Bow-wow! Ariel. The watch-dogs bark: Burthen.... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2007 - 297 str.
...either true or fair; For these dead birds sigh a prayer. POEMS FROM THE PLAYS THE TEMPEST ARIEL Come unto these yellow sands, And then take hands: Court'sied when you have, and kiss'd, (The wild waves whist,) Foot it featly here and there ; And sweet sprites, the burden bear.... | |
| Thomas A. Foster - 2007 - 415 str.
...have been,) / Will featly foot the moonlight hours away." The echo of Ariel's song from The Tempest ("foot it featly, here and there / And sweet sprites the burden bear") brings the political utopia decisively into the greenworld of pastoral convention. As at Stowe in England,... | |
| David Mikics - 2008 - 364 str.
...can mean a refrain or chorus, or a theme or matter (the burden of my song = what my song is about). "Foot it featly here and there, / And, sweet sprites, the burden bear," sings Ariel in Shakespeare's The Tempest. Isaiah 13:1 refers to "the burden against Babylon": the Hebrew... | |
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