Shakespeare and the SupernaturalWilliams & Norgate Limited, 1931 - 346 Seiten |
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Seite 19
Cumberland Clark. I ELIZABETHAN SUPERSTITION WHAT may be termed the prestige of the Supernatural must be at its highest in an age as permeated with superstition as the Elizabethan . In Shakespeare's England the almost universal belief in ...
Cumberland Clark. I ELIZABETHAN SUPERSTITION WHAT may be termed the prestige of the Supernatural must be at its highest in an age as permeated with superstition as the Elizabethan . In Shakespeare's England the almost universal belief in ...
Seite 25
... Elizabethan times , perhaps none is so strange and so interesting to us to - day as witchcraft . Probably the reason is that here we have a superstition which is now dead . Unlike other beliefs which linger on in strange forms , we have ...
... Elizabethan times , perhaps none is so strange and so interesting to us to - day as witchcraft . Probably the reason is that here we have a superstition which is now dead . Unlike other beliefs which linger on in strange forms , we have ...
Seite 29
... Elizabethan magician ; and when we come to consider The Tempest we shall see how original and wonderful is Shakespeare's higher conception in the person of Prospero . One of the most abhorred features of witchcraft was the Evil Eye ...
... Elizabethan magician ; and when we come to consider The Tempest we shall see how original and wonderful is Shakespeare's higher conception in the person of Prospero . One of the most abhorred features of witchcraft was the Evil Eye ...
Inhalt
ELIZABETHAN SUPERSTITION | 19 |
SHAKESPEARE AND POPULAR BELIEF | 34 |
ni MIDSUMMER NIGHTS DREAM | 44 |
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