The Works of Shakespeare, Band 40at the University Press, 1972 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 84
Seite xxiii
... Troy was for Shakespeare the symbol of tragic loss and horror . Troilus ' associations were with comedy , but Troy's with tragedy , and Vergil may have supplied the hint for Trojan wrong- headedness which Shakespeare developed in his ...
... Troy was for Shakespeare the symbol of tragic loss and horror . Troilus ' associations were with comedy , but Troy's with tragedy , and Vergil may have supplied the hint for Trojan wrong- headedness which Shakespeare developed in his ...
Seite 25
... Troy , call you yourself Æneas ? Eneas . Ay , Greek , that is my name . Agamemnon . What's your affair , I pray you ? Eneas . Sir , pardon : ' tis for Agamemnon's ears . Agamemnon . He hears nought privately that comes from Troy . 240 ...
... Troy , call you yourself Æneas ? Eneas . Ay , Greek , that is my name . Agamemnon . What's your affair , I pray you ? Eneas . Sir , pardon : ' tis for Agamemnon's ears . Agamemnon . He hears nought privately that comes from Troy . 240 ...
Seite 209
... Troy . Caxton describes Nestor as having been with Hercules when he attacked Troy in revenge for Lao- medon's hostility to Jason . Laomedon did ' marvels of arms ' ( pp . 349-50 ) in defending the city but was slain by Hercules ...
... Troy . Caxton describes Nestor as having been with Hercules when he attacked Troy in revenge for Lao- medon's hostility to Jason . Laomedon did ' marvels of arms ' ( pp . 349-50 ) in defending the city but was slain by Hercules ...
Inhalt
PREFATORY NOTE PAGE | vii |
THE STAGE HISTORY | xlvii |
TO THE READER | lvi |
Urheberrecht | |
3 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Abbott According to Caxton Achilles Adagia Æneas Agamemnon Ajax Alexander allusion Andromache Antenor arms battle blood Calchas Camb Cassandra compositors conj Deighton Deiphobus Diomed Diomedes doth Dyce E. K. Chambers emendation Eneas Enter PANDARUS Entry error Exeunt Exit eyes fair fight fool foul papers give goes Grecian Greeks Greg Hanmer hath heart heavens Hector Hecuba Helen honour kiss lord Lydgate Menelaus misreading Myrmidons Nestor night Pandarus Paris Patroclus play Pope praise Priam pride prince Prol Prologue Q. F. Enter Q. F. omit quarrel reading reason S.D. after Cap S.D. after Rowe S.D. Loc scene seems sense Servant Shakespeare speak speech suggests sweet queen sword tell tent Theatre thee Theob there's Thersites thou thought tion Troilus and Cressida Trojan Troy trumpet Ulysses unarm variants Variorum what's word