 | Olli-Pekka Moisio, Juha Suoranta - 2006 - 255 sayfa
...3(3). 22 STEVEN BEST AND DOUGLAS KELLNER 2. BIOTECHNOLOGY, DEMOCRACY, AND THE POLITICS OF CLONING1 O, wonder! How many goodly creatures are there here...beauteous mankind is ! O brave new world That has such people in't. William Shakespeare, The Tempest We're ready to go because we think that the genie's... | |
 | Thomas Docherty - 2006 - 185 sayfa
...men, and, from a position in which she has thought of Ferdinand as an absolute beauty, she now finds 'How many goodly creatures are there here! /How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world /That has such people in't'. In both these cases, absolute values become relativised; and the logic of the play... | |
 | Richard S. Tedlow - 2007 - 568 sayfa
...historian Leo Marx called his "American fable,"4 The Tempest. From Miranda, this famed, ecstatic utterance: O, wonder! How many goodly creatures are there here!...beauteous mankind is! O brave new world, That has such people in't! (act 5, scene 1 ) The "brave new world" is so "beauteous" that even the monster Caliban... | |
 | Phillip H. McMath - 2007 - 517 sayfa
...earnestness to God our Lord that He would give health and influence them to make us o some good return. "O, wonder! How many goodly creatures are there here!...How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world that has such people in it!" They took a wandering southwestward path with hundreds, sometimes thousands, of... | |
 | Thomas Kruthaup - 2007 - 60 sayfa
...Titel Brave New World ist eine Adaption Shakespeares. Zitat aus Shakespeares The Tempest: "Mirinda: O, wonder! How many goodly creatures are there here!...How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world that has such people in it!"1 Welches dann in Brave New World so wieder zu finden ist: „Schöne neue Welt... | |
 | Jocelyn Harris - 2007 - 280 sayfa
..."perfect, " a word more suitable for Anne alone. Or perhaps the faint echo of Miranda's naive outcry, "How many goodly creatures are there here! / How beauteous mankind is! O brave new world / That has such people in't!"9 felt obtrusive. Whatever the reason, Austen removed it. A jumble of interlineated... | |
| |