The Works of Shakespeare, Band 34 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 23
Seite xi
THE FABLE OF THE BELLY AND THE MEMBERS Except at one point the sole source of Coriolanus is what Shakespeare found in the seventh of Plutarch's Lives , as translated by Sir Thomas North from the French version by Jaques Amyot .
THE FABLE OF THE BELLY AND THE MEMBERS Except at one point the sole source of Coriolanus is what Shakespeare found in the seventh of Plutarch's Lives , as translated by Sir Thomas North from the French version by Jaques Amyot .
Seite xix
In other words , I suggest it was probably Plutarch's account of the interview between mother and son that originally fired his imagination to compose yet another Roman play , the central theme of which should be not politics or ...
In other words , I suggest it was probably Plutarch's account of the interview between mother and son that originally fired his imagination to compose yet another Roman play , the central theme of which should be not politics or ...
Seite xx
Moreover Plutarch makes Menenius relate the fable of the Belly in reply to the complaints about usury , whereas Shakespeare saw that it was far more apt to those about famine , and borrowed from Camden the word ' gulf ' for the belly to ...
Moreover Plutarch makes Menenius relate the fable of the Belly in reply to the complaints about usury , whereas Shakespeare saw that it was far more apt to those about famine , and borrowed from Camden the word ' gulf ' for the belly to ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Inhalt
PREFATORY NOTE PAGE | vii |
THE STAGE HISTORY OF CORIOLANUS | xli |
TO THE READER | lv |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Aufidius banished battle bear better blood body Brutus Camb cause cites Citizen Clar Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus Corioli death enemy Enter Entry eyes fear fight follow friends gates give gods goes hand hath head hear heart honour keep Lartius leave less lines live look lords Marcius mark mean Menenius mind mother nature never noble North o'th once peace play Plutarch poor Pope pray present prob reason Roman Rome Rowe seems Senate sense Servingman Shakespeare Sicinius soldier speak speech stand suggests sword tell thee Theob thing thou tongue tribunes true turn Valeria Virgilia voices Volsces Volumnia wife worthy wounds