Shakespeare and the SupernaturalWilliams & Norgate Limited, 1931 - 346 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 25
Seite 84
... Weird Sisters , " or the " Weird Women , " or sometimes merely the " Sisters . " Whereas the ordinary witch was dreaded because she could injure with a glance , make a child sick , cause losses among livestock , or otherwise inflict ...
... Weird Sisters , " or the " Weird Women , " or sometimes merely the " Sisters . " Whereas the ordinary witch was dreaded because she could injure with a glance , make a child sick , cause losses among livestock , or otherwise inflict ...
Seite 94
... Weird Sisters provide in their glamorous and cleverly dis- guised prophecies the temptation which Macbeth's ambitious yearnings cannot resist . He yields , and the end is tragedy . We must ask ourselves how Shakespeare meant us to ...
... Weird Sisters provide in their glamorous and cleverly dis- guised prophecies the temptation which Macbeth's ambitious yearnings cannot resist . He yields , and the end is tragedy . We must ask ourselves how Shakespeare meant us to ...
Seite 100
... Weird Sisters , and places his own interpretation upon the supernatural manifestation . For the second stage appearance of the Weird Sisters , Shakespeare adopted a different course . Holinshed describes the second lot of prophecies as ...
... Weird Sisters , and places his own interpretation upon the supernatural manifestation . For the second stage appearance of the Weird Sisters , Shakespeare adopted a different course . Holinshed describes the second lot of prophecies as ...
Inhalt
ELIZABETHAN SUPERSTITION | 19 |
SHAKESPEARE AND POPULAR BELIEF | 34 |
ni MIDSUMMER NIGHTS DREAM | 44 |
12 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted appear Archbishop Arden Ariel attitude audience Banquo believe Bible Bishops Caliban Cardinal Catholic Catholicism character Christian Chronicle Plays Church conforming Protestant creed critics death devil divine doctrine dogma doubt dramatic dramatist Duke Elizabeth Elizabethan England English evil fairies Falstaff father fear folk-lore Friar Hamlet Hamlet Ghost hath heaven Henry VI Henry VIII holy Horatio human immortal influence John Shakespeare Julius Cæsar King John Macbeth Measure for Measure Midsummer Night's Dream mind mortal murder nature night Oberon orthodox Pandulph papal passages philosophy play Poet Poet's Pope popular Prayer Book priests Prince prophecies Prospero Protestantism Puck Puritan Queen recusants references Reformation religion religious reveals Richard Richard III rites Roman Rome says scene Scripture Shake soul speak speare speare's spirit Stratford super Supernatural superstition Tempest theatre thee thou thought tion Titania tragedy true Weird Sisters William Shakespeare witchcraft witches words writes