Tragedy of King Lear: With Introduction, and Notes, Explanatory and Critical, for Use in Schools and ClassesGinn & Company, 1898 |
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Página 10
... eyes ; and then let me go , neither imprisoning nor killing me , but rather delighting to make me feel my misery . And as he came to the crown by unjust means , so he kept it as unjustly ; disarming all his own countrymen , so that no ...
... eyes ; and then let me go , neither imprisoning nor killing me , but rather delighting to make me feel my misery . And as he came to the crown by unjust means , so he kept it as unjustly ; disarming all his own countrymen , so that no ...
Página 23
... eye to discern the error of such things , but no sense for the deeper truth they involve . For such superstitions are the natural development of the religious instincts unenlight- ened by Revelation . So that he who would not be ...
... eye to discern the error of such things , but no sense for the deeper truth they involve . For such superstitions are the natural development of the religious instincts unenlight- ened by Revelation . So that he who would not be ...
Página 34
... eye of anguish . " This reply , " says Dr. Kellogg , " is significant , and worthy of careful attention , as embracing a brief summary of almost the only true principles recognized by modern science , and now carried out by the most ...
... eye of anguish . " This reply , " says Dr. Kellogg , " is significant , and worthy of careful attention , as embracing a brief summary of almost the only true principles recognized by modern science , and now carried out by the most ...
Página 36
... eyes , he would probably have seen less of her inward meaning , and been less happy and less idiomatic in his translation of it . Ben Jonson magnifi- cently apostrophizes him as " Soul of the Age " and the supremacy of his genius lies ...
... eyes , he would probably have seen less of her inward meaning , and been less happy and less idiomatic in his translation of it . Ben Jonson magnifi- cently apostrophizes him as " Soul of the Age " and the supremacy of his genius lies ...
Página 39
... eye , that we almost lose the sense of what is shown , in the interest of what is suggested . Thus she affects us through finer and deeper susceptibilities than consciousness can grasp ; as if she at once both used and developed in us ...
... eye , that we almost lose the sense of what is shown , in the interest of what is suggested . Thus she affects us through finer and deeper susceptibilities than consciousness can grasp ; as if she at once both used and developed in us ...
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Términos y frases comunes
Alack Albany art thou Ben Jonson better Burgundy called character Coleridge Cord Cordelia Corn Cornwall daughters dear death Doct doth Dover Dowden drama Duke Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Edgar Edmund Enter Exeunt Exit eyes father feel follow Fool fortune France Gent Gentleman gerundively give Glos Gloster GLOSTER'S Castle gods Goneril grace Hamlet hand hath hear heart Heavens hence hither honour Kent King Lear kingdom knave lady Lear's lord Macbeth madam matter means mind nature night noble nuncle old copies old King OSWALD passion pity play Poet Poet's poor Poor Tom Pr'ythee pray probably quartos read Regan SCENE seems sense Servants Shakespeare shame sister small vices speak speech stand storm sword tell thee there's thine thing thou art thought tion traitor unnatural villain virtue wits word