| Luke Andrew Wilson - 2000 - 388 頁
...Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise I will? I'll have them fly to India for...delicates, I'll have them read me strange philosophy, And tell the secrets of all foreign kings; I'll have them wall all Germany with brass, And make swift Rhine... | |
| Christopher Marlowe - 2000 - 564 頁
...Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise I will? I'll have them fly to India for...pearl, And search all corners of the new-found world 80 For pleasant fruits and princely delicates; I'll have them read me strange philosophy, And tell... | |
| Peter Holland - 2001 - 398 頁
...material treasure. Faustus imagines fetching gold from India and orient pearl from the ocean. He will 'search all corners of the new-found world / For pleasant fruits and princely delicates' (86-7). Friar Bacon too promises his dignitaries a great feast of 'candy' and 'spices' brought from... | |
| Marion Gibson - 2003 - 288 頁
...Shall 1 make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate15 enterprise I will? I'll have them fly to India for...Ransack the ocean for orient pearl, And search all comers of the new-found world K) For pleasant fruits and princely délicates:17 I'll have them read... | |
| Denis Judd - 2004 - 290 頁
.... .' Marlowe returned to this theme in Faustus: 'Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please. . . . Ill have them fly to India for gold, Ransack the ocean...new-found world For pleasant fruits and princely delicates [spices].'4 Later, John Milton wrote in Parodise Lost of 'Agra and Lahor of Great Mogul V Apart from... | |
| Michael Hattaway - 2005 - 272 頁
...194). His appearance makes him a divine, but a divine wracked with banal fantasies of wealth and power: I'll have them fly to India for gold, Ransack the...world For pleasant fruits and princely delicates. (1. 1.80-3) He is a man alone, obsessive, afflicted perhaps with scholar's melancholy, and, like the... | |
| Michael Mitchell - 2006 - 354 頁
...Faustus, 169. 44 Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, 287-88. and Marlowe, Doctor Faustus, ed. Keefer, Ixii-lxxvii. fly to India for gold, Ransack the ocean for orient pearl And search all corners of the new found world For pleasant fruits and princely delicates. (1.1.84-87) Espionage will be perfected... | |
| N. Krishnaswamy, Lalitha Krishnaswamy - 2006 - 240 頁
...British colonialism, which continued for the next one hundred and seventy-five years. 1.1.3 The Charter "I'll have them fly to India for gold, Ransack the ocean for orient pearl!" [Doctor Fausfus, Ii] These are the words of Dr. Faustus in the play of that name written by Christopher... | |
| Walter S. H. Lim - 2006 - 314 頁
...And Doctor Faustus speculates on the tasks he will assign the spirits he will command as conjuror: "I'll have them fly to India for gold / Ransack the ocean for orient pearl" (1.1.82-83). "India" can refer to either the East or the West Indies, and in early modern England the... | |
| Francesco Orlando - 2008 - 520 頁
...magnificence that rivals the oceans, continents, and abysmal depths of the Spanish and Portuguese examples: I'll have them fly to India for gold, Ransack the ocean for orient pearl. The spirits tell me they can dry the sea, And fetch the treasure of all foreign wracks. Yea, all the... | |
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