Untersuchungen über Shakespeare's "Sturm"

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A. Reissner, 1872 - 149 pages
 

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Page 65 - would it had been done ! Thou didst prevent me ; I had peopled else This isle with Calibans. Pro. Abhorred slave ! Which any print of goodness will not take, Being capable of all ill ! I pitied thee, Took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each hour One thing or other : when thou didst not, savage, Know thine own meaning, but would'st gabble like A thing most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes With words that made them known...
Page 135 - ... a dreadfull storme and hideous began to blow from out the North-east, which swelling, and roaring as it were by fits, some...
Page 58 - It is a nation, would I answer Plato, that hath no kinde of traffike, no knowledge of Letters, no intelligence of numbers, no name of magistrate...
Page 85 - Through help of whom (the crooked banks much wondering at the thing) I have compelled streams to run clean backward to their spring.
Page 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...
Page 140 - Lady) as death comes not so sodaine nor apparant, so he comes not so elvish and painfull (to men especially even then in health and perfect habitudes of body) as at Sea; who comes at no time so welcome, but our frailty (so weake is the hold of hope in miserable demonstrations of danger) it makes guilty of many contrary changes, and conflicts: For indeede death is accompanied at no time, nor place with circumstances every way so uncapable of particularities of goodnesse and inward comforts as at Sea.
Page 110 - 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, to mixe his head with other mens heeles...
Page 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 scene that might incourage hope.
Page 138 - Shroud, tempting to settle as it were upon any of the foure Shrouds: and for three or foure houres together, or rather more, halfe the night it kept with us; running sometimes along the Maine-yard to the very end, and then returning.
Page 115 - Und sagt euch, dafs ihr Sturm erwarten sollt. Wir bringen That und Wort wie sie sich zeigen, Und Charaktere, die dem Lustspiel eigen, Wenn's unsre Zeit darstellen will in Bildern, Und nicht Verbrechen, sondern Thorheit schildern.

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