The Pelican Guide to English Literature: The age of ShakespearePenguin Books, 1963 |
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Seite 171
... lines ; the proper setting has been achieved , and Faustus , as already in the first scene , uses his own name almost mesmerically as a sort of incantation - he is later to admit ( I. i . 10 ) , ' the god thou servest is thine own ...
... lines ; the proper setting has been achieved , and Faustus , as already in the first scene , uses his own name almost mesmerically as a sort of incantation - he is later to admit ( I. i . 10 ) , ' the god thou servest is thine own ...
Seite 173
... line ' to slay mine enemies and aid my friends ' brings home to us that Faustus's is no lofty and disinterested search for knowledge in itself . In the first lines of his next speech Faustus again displays his irre- sponsible levity ...
... line ' to slay mine enemies and aid my friends ' brings home to us that Faustus's is no lofty and disinterested search for knowledge in itself . In the first lines of his next speech Faustus again displays his irre- sponsible levity ...
Seite 285
... lines : In each of which he seems to shake a lance , As brandish'd at the eyes of Ignorance . The difference between the attitude displayed in this poem and Jonson's other recorded views on Shakespeare may partly be explained by the ...
... lines : In each of which he seems to shake a lance , As brandish'd at the eyes of Ignorance . The difference between the attitude displayed in this poem and Jonson's other recorded views on Shakespeare may partly be explained by the ...
Inhalt
BORIS FORD | 7 |
L G SALINGAR | 15 |
IAN WATT | 119 |
Urheberrecht | |
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