The Works of Shakespeare, Band 11 |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 40
Seite xxix
Honest Williams , concerned for the state of his soul before battle , gives us the following vivid glimpse of the stricken field : But if the cause be not good , the king himself hath a heavy reckoning to make , when all those legs ...
Honest Williams , concerned for the state of his soul before battle , gives us the following vivid glimpse of the stricken field : But if the cause be not good , the king himself hath a heavy reckoning to make , when all those legs ...
Seite xxxi
Such battle , if fought to the death as at Thermopylae , or till victory as at Bannockburn , by a body of men united in affection and loyalty under an indomitable leader , has always appeared in their eyes the finest of war - plays .
Such battle , if fought to the death as at Thermopylae , or till victory as at Bannockburn , by a body of men united in affection and loyalty under an indomitable leader , has always appeared in their eyes the finest of war - plays .
Seite xxxvii
Yet Shakespeare makes it central to his account of the battle . Indeed , it is almost the only aspect of it he sets upon the stage ; for though the hubris of the French , which was the primary cause of their overthrow1 , is well brought ...
Yet Shakespeare makes it central to his account of the battle . Indeed , it is almost the only aspect of it he sets upon the stage ; for though the hubris of the French , which was the primary cause of their overthrow1 , is well brought ...
Was andere dazu sagen - Rezension schreiben
Es wurden keine Rezensionen gefunden.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Agincourt Alice answer appear Bardolph battle better blood brother called Captain cause Chorus comes Constable crown Dauphin death doth doubt Duke England English Enter Exeter eyes face fair fear field fight fire Fluellen follows force France French friends give Gower grace hand hath head hear heart Henry's Holinshed honour Introd John Katharine keep kind King Henry knight live look lord majesty means mind natural never once Orleans perhaps Pistol play poor Pope present princes Prol Rowe scene Shakespeare soldiers speak speech spirit stage stand Stone sword tell thee Theo thing thou thought turn Wylie