Love's Labor's LostSimon and Schuster, 2016年3月15日 - 352页 The authoritative edition Love’s Labor’s Lost from The Folger Shakespeare Library, the trusted and widely used Shakespeare series for students and general readers. At first glance, Shakespeare’s early comedy Love’s Labor’s Lost simply entertains and amuses. Four young men (one of them a king) withdraw from the world for three years, taking an oath that they will have nothing to do with women. The King of Navarre soon learns, however, that the Princess of France and her ladies are about to arrive. Although he lodges them outside of his court, all four men fall in love with the ladies, abandoning their oaths and setting out to win their hands. The laughter triggered by this story is augmented by subplots involving a braggart soldier, a clever page, illiterate servants, a parson, a schoolmaster, and a constable so dull that he is named Dull. Letters and poems are misdelivered, confessions are overheard, entertainments are presented, and language is played with, and misused, by the ignorant and learned alike. At a deeper level, Love’s Labor’s Lost also teases the mind. The men begin with the premise that women either are seductresses or goddesses. The play soon makes it clear, however, that the reality of male-female relations is different. That women are not identical to men’s images of them is a common theme in Shakespeare’s plays. In Love’s Labor’s Lost it receives one of its most pressing examinations. This edition includes: -Freshly edited text based on the best early printed version of the play -Full explanatory notes conveniently placed on pages facing the text of the play -Scene-by-scene plot summaries -A key to the play’s famous lines and phrases -An introduction to reading Shakespeare’s language -An essay by a leading Shakespeare scholar providing a modern perspective on the play -Fresh images from the Folger Shakespeare Library’s vast holdings of rare books -An annotated guide to further reading Essay by William C. Carroll The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, is home to the world’s largest collection of Shakespeare’s printed works, and a magnet for Shakespeare scholars from around the globe. In addition to exhibitions open to the public throughout the year, the Folger offers a full calendar of performances and programs. For more information, visit Folger.edu. |
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共有 33 个结果,这是第 1-5 个
第xvii页
... speech patterns or to allow the character to speak in a special way . When we attend a good performance of the play , the actors will have worked out the sentence structures and will articulate the sentences so that the meaning is clear ...
... speech patterns or to allow the character to speak in a special way . When we attend a good performance of the play , the actors will have worked out the sentence structures and will articulate the sentences so that the meaning is clear ...
第xviii页
... speech , you may wish to rearrange the words , putting together the word clusters ( e.g. , “ Let fame live registered upon our brazen tombs ” ) . You will usually find that the sentence will gain in clarity but will lose its rhythm or ...
... speech , you may wish to rearrange the words , putting together the word clusters ( e.g. , “ Let fame live registered upon our brazen tombs ” ) . You will usually find that the sentence will gain in clarity but will lose its rhythm or ...
第xix页
... speech rhythm . For example , when Berowne mockingly responds to Dumaine's praise of Katherine's beauty ( “ As fair as day ) , ” Berowne says “ Ay , as some days , but then no sun must shine . ” In Berowne's speech the omission of the ...
... speech rhythm . For example , when Berowne mockingly responds to Dumaine's praise of Katherine's beauty ( “ As fair as day ) , ” Berowne says “ Ay , as some days , but then no sun must shine . ” In Berowne's speech the omission of the ...
第xxii页
... speech soon offers another instance : “ The grosser manner of these world's delights / He throws upon the gross world's baser slaves . " While polyptoton showcases a character's mastery of language and invites the audience to delight in ...
... speech soon offers another instance : “ The grosser manner of these world's delights / He throws upon the gross world's baser slaves . " While polyptoton showcases a character's mastery of language and invites the audience to delight in ...
第xxiv页
... speech is a series of metaphors comparing different orders of language to different kinds of cloth . Elaborate , ornate language , or " figures pedantical " ( scholarly figures of speech ) , are represented as taffeta , ilk , and velvet ...
... speech is a series of metaphors comparing different orders of language to different kinds of cloth . Elaborate , ornate language , or " figures pedantical " ( scholarly figures of speech ) , are represented as taffeta , ilk , and velvet ...
目录
ix | |
xxvii | |
xxxviii | |
xlvii | |
Appendix | 223 |
Textual Notes | 245 |
A Modern Perspective | 253 |
Further Reading | 269 |
Key to Famous Lines and Phrases | 289 |
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常见术语和短语
actors affection appears ARMADO audience beauty begin BEROWNE blood BOYET called characters COSTARD court desire direction doth Dull DUMAINE early edition editors English Enter error example exit eyes face fair favor figures Folger Folio fool four France give grace hand hath head hear heart Henry hold HOLOFERNES Jaquenetta KATHERINE keep KING ladies language later Latin learned letter light lines lived London LONGAVILLE longer note look lords Love's Labor's Lost MARIA mark master meaning Mote NATHANIEL Navarre oath performed perhaps play praise present Press PRINCESS printed prove Quarto readers reason ROSALINE scene sense Shakespeare's speak speech stage stand sweet term theater thee thou tion tongue true turn University woman women words Worthies