Top Banner
BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE
57

BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Dec 14, 2015

Download

Documents

Katarina Barret
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

BRITISH-AMERICAN

KALEIDOSCOPE

Page 2: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

William Shakespeare

Page 3: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The room in which Shakespeare was born

Page 4: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The Shakespeare’s house

Page 5: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The Shakespeare’s troupe theater

Page 6: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

William Shakespeare

1564-1616

Page 7: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.
Page 8: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

 Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?

Page 9: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

THOUGH ART MORE LOVELY AND MORE TEMPERATE,

Page 10: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,

Page 11: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

AND SUMMER’S LEASE HATH ALL TOO SHORT A DAY.

Page 12: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

SOMETIMES TOO HOT THE EYE OF HEAVEN SHINES

Page 13: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

AND OFTEN IS HIS GOLD COMPLEXION DIMMED,

Page 14: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

And every fair from fair sometime declined

Page 15: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

By chance or nature's changing cause untrimmed

Page 16: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

But thy eternal summer shall not fade,

Page 17: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Nor loose possession of that fair though owest,

Page 18: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

NOR SHALL DEATH BRAG THOU WANDER IN HIS SHADE

Page 19: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

WHEN IN ETERNAL LINES TO TIME THOU GROWEST.

Page 20: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

So long as mаn can breeth or eyes can see,

Page 21: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

So long lives this and this gives life to thee.

Page 22: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.
Page 23: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.
Page 24: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Robert Burns

Page 25: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Robert Burns1774-1796

Page 26: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The Burn’s house

Page 27: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The Monument to the poet in London

Page 28: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

MY HEARTS IN THE HIGHLANDS

Page 29: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart’s in the Highlands, my heart is not here,

Page 30: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart's in the Highlans a-chasing the deer,

Page 31: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

A-chasing the wild deer and following the roe

Page 32: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart's in the Highlands, wherever I go!

Page 33: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Farewell to the Highlands, farewell to the North,

Page 34: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The birthplace of valour, the country of worth

Page 35: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Wherever I wander, wherever I rove,

Page 36: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The hills of the Highlands for ever I love.

Page 37: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Farewell to the mountains high cover'd with snow,

Page 38: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Farewell to the straths and green valleys below,

Page 39: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Farewell to the forests and wild-hanging woods,

Page 40: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Farewell to the torrents and loud-pouring flood!

Page 41: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart's in the Highlands, my heart is not here,

Page 42: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart's in the Highlands a-chasing the deer,

Page 43: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

A-chasing the wild deer and following the roe -

Page 44: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

My heart's in the Highlands, wherever I go!

Page 45: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Mark Twain

Page 46: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

 The room in which Twain was born 

Page 47: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

The writer’s house-museum

Page 48: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

            The Twain’s tomb

Page 49: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Mark Twain1835-1810

Page 50: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Thomas Moor

Page 51: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Thomas Moor 1478-1535

Page 52: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Moor and his family

Page 53: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.
Page 54: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Andrew Lloyd Webber

Page 55: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.
Page 56: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Стань лучше и сам пойми, кто ты, прежде чем встретишь нового человека и будешь надеяться, что он тебя поймет .

Page 57: BRITISH-AMERICAN KALEIDOSCOPE. William Shakespeare.

Воплоти свои мечты. Время пришло…