Our drooping Country now erects her Head, Peace spreads her balmy Wings, and Plenty Blooms. Divine Cordelia, all the Gods can witness How much thy Love to Empire I prefer! Thy bright Example shall convince the World (Whatever Storms of Fortune are decreed)... King Lear: A Tragedy : in Five Acts - 56. oldalszerző: William Shakespeare, Nahum Tate - 1811 - 70 oldalTeljes nézet - Információ erről a könyvről
| Russell A. Fraser - 1962 - 240 oldal
...he thought, to clarify the play. More indulgent than Shakespeare and not so tentative, he was sure (Whatever Storms of Fortune are decreed) That Truth and Virtue shall at last succeed. It is a pleasant and a good-natured conclusion to a harrowing tale. Unhappily, the antecedent action... | |
| Helen Cooper - 2004 - 560 oldal
...triumphant affirmation of everything Shakespeare had shaped his play to avoid, as Edgar assures his bride, Whatever storms of fortune are decreed, That Truth and Virtue shall at last succeed.72 But this is no longer an age of faith, and the claim is altogether too easy: a piece of... | |
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