Untersuchungen über Shakespeare's "Sturm"

Portada
A. Reissner, 1872 - 149 páginas
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Pasajes populares

Página 86 - I raise and lay the winds, and burst the viper's jaw, And from the bowels of the earth both stones and trees do draw; Whole woods and forests I remove; I make the mountains shake, And even the earth itself to groan and fearfully to quake ; I call up dead men from their graves, and thee, O lightsome moon, I darken oft, though beaten brass abate thy peril soon.
Página 147 - Scripture falsly quoted) that it was no breach of honesty, conscience, nor Religion, to decline from the obedience of the Governour, or refuse to goe any further, led by his authority (except it so pleased themselves) since the authority ceased when the wracke was committed, and with it, they were all then freed from the government of any man...
Página 136 - Prayers might well be in the heart and lips but drowned in the outcries of the officers:* nothing heard that could give comfort, nothing seen that might encourage hope.
Página 138 - Summers being upon the watch, had an apparition of a little round light, like a faint Starre, trembling, and streaming along with a sparkeling blaze, halfe the height upon the Maine Mast, and shooting sometimes from Shroud to Shroud, tempting to settle as it were upon any...
Página 136 - Sometimes strikes in our Ship amongst women, and passengers not used to such hurly and discomforts, made us look one upon the other with troubled hearts, and panting bosoms, our clamors drowned in the winds, and the winds in thunder.
Página 110 - Servant-monster i' the Fayre; who can helpe it? he sayes; nor a nest of Antiques? Hee is loth to make Nature afraid in his Playes, like those that beget Tales, Tempests, and such like Drolleries...
Página 136 - ... the wind ere while) was no sooner a little emptied and qualified, but instantly the winds (as having gotten their mouths now free and at liberty) spake more loud, and grew more tumultuous and malignant.
Página 116 - The poet As old in time as Plato, and as knowing, Says, that your highest female grace is silence.
Página 135 - For four and twenty hours the storm, in a restless tumult, had blown so exceedingly, as we could not apprehend in our imaginations any possibility of greater violence, yet did we still find it, not only more terrible, but more constant, fury added to fury...
Página 7 - In seiner ganzen Macht. Fort, blöde Schlauheit! Führ du das Wort mir, schlichte, heil'ge Unschuld! Ich bin Eu'r Weib, wenn Ihr mich haben wollt, Sonst sterb...

Información bibliográfica