3 résultats pour "midsummer"
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Excerpt from A Midsummer Night's Dream - anthology.
BOTTOM: Well, proceed. QUINCE: Robin Starveling, the tailor? STARVELING: Here, Peter Quince. QUINCE: Robin Starveling, you must play Thisbe’s mother. Tom Snout, the tinker? SNOUT: Here, Peter Quince. QUINCE: You, Pyramus’ father; myself, Thisbe’s father; Snug, the joiner, you the lion’s part; and I hope here is a play fitted. SNUG: Have you the lion’s part written? Pray you, if it be, give it me; for I am slow of study. QUINCE: You may do it extempore; for it is nothing but roaring. BOTTOM: Let...
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Act V, scene one of A Midsummer Night's Dream
than vast hell can hold” (l.9). The lover sees beauty everywhere even where the others don’t. Love makes him blind and the hyperbole shows the power of imagination: “The lover sees Helen’s beauty in a brow of Egypt” (l.11). Then, the poet turns abstract into concrete, capturing in words what humans can’t imagine. He creates a news language, he has a central role four society and also, he is intermediary between heaven and earth. Like justify the chiasmus line 13: “The poet’s eye, in a fine frenz...
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From Bulfinch's Mythology: Pyramus and Thisbe - anthology.
In Mickle's translation of the 'Lusiad' occurs the following allusion to the story of Pyramus and Thisbe, and the metamorphosis of the mulberries. The poet isdescribing the Island of Love: '… here each gift of Pomona's hand bestows In cultured garden, free uncultured flows,The flavour sweeter and the hue more fairThan e'er was fostered by the hand of care.The cherry here in shining crimson glows,And stained with lovers' blood, in pendent rows,The mulberries o'erload the bending boughs.' If...