The Summons of Death on the Medieval and Renaissance English StageOhio State University Press, 1987 - 334 Seiten |
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Seite 108
... Selimus often seem to have been created for the sole purpose of eliciting a lively curiosity as to who would be killed next , or how many at one blow . Indeed , Soliman sometimes seems to order executions for want of other sport ; and ...
... Selimus often seem to have been created for the sole purpose of eliciting a lively curiosity as to who would be killed next , or how many at one blow . Indeed , Soliman sometimes seems to order executions for want of other sport ; and ...
Seite 125
... Selimus's aspirations certainly sound like echoes of Tamburlaine's : Selimus : But we , whose mind in heavenly thoughts is clad , Whose body doth a glorious spirit bear , That hath no bounds , but flieth everywhere , Why should we seek ...
... Selimus's aspirations certainly sound like echoes of Tamburlaine's : Selimus : But we , whose mind in heavenly thoughts is clad , Whose body doth a glorious spirit bear , That hath no bounds , but flieth everywhere , Why should we seek ...
Seite 126
Phoebe S. Spinrad. Selimus : Then some sage man , above the vulgar wise , Knowing that laws could not in quiet dwell Unless they were observed , did first devise The names of Gods , religion , heaven , and hell , And ' gan of pains and ...
Phoebe S. Spinrad. Selimus : Then some sage man , above the vulgar wise , Knowing that laws could not in quiet dwell Unless they were observed , did first devise The names of Gods , religion , heaven , and hell , And ' gan of pains and ...
Inhalt
Answering the Summons | 27 |
Death Takes to the Stage | 50 |
Death as Educator | 68 |
Urheberrecht | |
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The Summons of Death on the Medieval and Renaissance English Stage Phoebe S. Spinrad Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1987 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accept appears audience become begin body Bosola called century characters Claudio comes comfort continue corpse course creature Dance Dance of Death dead death despair devil Doctor drama Duchess Duke dying early effect Elizabethan English Everyman evil face fact faith fall Faustus fear figure finally force friends give given God's hand heart heaven Hell human Jacobean John Judgment kill King later lines living London look means Measure medieval mind Morality nature never pain perhaps play Press prison question reason rejected religious Renaissance repentance response salvation says scene seems seen sense Shakespeare sins skeleton skull soul speak stage Studies Summons symbol Tamburlaine tells thee things thou thought tion tradition Tragedy true turn Univ universe Vindice warning Worldly York