King Lear: Modern Text with IntroductionUniversity Press of America, 1984 - 151 sider "King Lear, one of Shakespeare's darkest and most savage plays, tells the story of the foolish and purblind Lear, who divides his kingdom, as he does his affections, according to vanity and whim. Lear's failure as a father engulfs himself and his world in turmoil and tragedy." "Eminent linguist and translator Burton Raffel offers generous help with vocabulary, pronunciation, and prosody and provides alternative readings of phrases and lines. His on-page annotations give readers all the tools they need to comprehend the play and begin to explore its many possible interpretations. Raffel provides an introductory essay, and in a concluding essay Harold Bloom examines Lear, who, though possessed of Jobean dignity, is rather unlike Job, since Lear so determinedly brings about his own suffering."--BOOK JACKET. |
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Side 11
... plays is that the editors cannot be relied on to put the ac- cents in the right places . One play edited by a well known Shakespearean editor had , I observed , a dozen ac- cents placed over the wrong syllables . This is under ...
... plays is that the editors cannot be relied on to put the ac- cents in the right places . One play edited by a well known Shakespearean editor had , I observed , a dozen ac- cents placed over the wrong syllables . This is under ...
Side 14
... play to its terrible end , with the death of his innocent daughter , Cordelia . In the old play of King Lear , which was Shakespeare's point of departure , this did not happen : it was the ex- tremism of his imagination that inflicted ...
... play to its terrible end , with the death of his innocent daughter , Cordelia . In the old play of King Lear , which was Shakespeare's point of departure , this did not happen : it was the ex- tremism of his imagination that inflicted ...
Side 18
... play and from Holin- shed , he adapted the underplot of Gloucester and his sons from Sidney's Arcadia ; one detail , which he put to use for the test when Cordelia properly reserved half of her love for her future husband , was ...
... play and from Holin- shed , he adapted the underplot of Gloucester and his sons from Sidney's Arcadia ; one detail , which he put to use for the test when Cordelia properly reserved half of her love for her future husband , was ...
Almindelige termer og sætninger
banished bastard bear blood brother Burgundy comes CORDELIA coxcomb CURAN daughter dear death Dover draw Duke of Albany Duke of Cornwall Earl Earl of Gloucester EDMUND Elizabethan Enter EDGAR Enter GLOUCESTER Enter KENT Enter LEAR Enter OSWALD Exeunt SCENE Exit SCENE eyes farewell father fear Flibbertigibbet follow FOOL fortune foul fiend give glanders GLOUCESTER EDGAR Gloucester's castle gods GONERIL ALBANY grace hand hear heart heaven hither honour horse hundred knights husband KENT LEAR King Lear KING OF FRANCE knave lady LEAR Let Lear's letter look lord madam Malapropisms man's master means MESSENGER nature never night noble offend pity play poor Poor Tom Pray scansion servants Shakespeare shame sister slave speak sprigs of rosemary stand storm sword tell There's thing THIRD KNIGHT thought Tom's a-cold traitor trumpet uncle villain William Shakespeare wind word wretch