| Mark Jay Mirsky - 1994 - 182 Seiten
...points this out succinctly in setting the pious Gonzalo's exclamation of joy in proper perspective. ... In one voyage Did Claribel her husband find at Tunis,...isle, and all of us ourselves When no man was his own. (5.1.208-13) "The truth is that what Gonzalo says does not sum up the play now reaching its end.... | |
| 1984 - 450 Seiten
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| R. B. Parker, Sheldon P. Zitner - 1996 - 340 Seiten
...their former selves, changed. For all of them (as for Bottom) something is gained in the translation ("in one voyage / Did Claribel her husband find at...isle; and all of us, ourselves, / When no man was his own," 5.1.208-13). But these transformations are no longer conceived as produced by the shock of an... | |
| Corinna Ruth - 1996 - 132 Seiten
...this point in the play, Gonzalo pulls all the threads of the action together in his expression of joy. In one voyage Did Claribel her husband find at Tunis,...isle; and all of us, ourselves, When no man was his own. Though the characters have not all been purified or regenerated, at least their delusions have... | |
| John Spencer Hill - 1997 - 224 Seiten
...marriage, on repentance and the "rarer action" of forgiveness, on truth as the revelatory filia temporis: O, rejoice Beyond a common joy, and set it down With...isle; and all of us, ourselves, When no man was his own. (5.1.206-13) Like Macbeth, Prospero, whose magic is the refined equivalent of the ambitious Scot's... | |
| Eric Cheyfitz - 1997 - 280 Seiten
...with the rest of Alonso 's company: Was Milan thrust from Milan, that his issue Should become Kings of Naples? O, rejoice Beyond a common joy! and set...dukedom In a poor isle, and all of us ourselves When DO man was his own. (Vi205-13) The passage suggests the paradoxical or ironic way that alienation,... | |
| Andrew Hadfield - 1998 - 336 Seiten
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