Great griefs, I see, medicine the less; for Cloten Is quite forgot. He was a queen's son, boys: And though he came our enemy, remember He was paid for that: though mean and mighty, rotting Together, have one dust, yet reverence, That angel of the world,... Gaisford prize: Greek Theocritean verse [Cymbeline, act 4, scene 2, tr.] by ... - Seite 8von William Shakespeare - 1869Vollansicht - Über dieses Buch
| William Shakespeare - 1988 - 732 Seiten
...word speak 242 fanes temples 243 med'cine cure 245 And though he came our enemy, remember He was paid0 for that. Though mean and mighty, rotting Together,...Of place 'tween high and low. Our foe was princely, MO And though you took his life as being0 our foe, Yet bury him as0 a prince. Guiderius. Pray you fetch... | |
| Marilyn L. Williamson - 1986 - 200 Seiten
...Without a monument" (4.2.227-28), and Belarius gives Cloten a princely burial, despite his misdeeds: "reverence, / That angel of the world, doth make distinction / Of place 'tween high and low" (4.2.48—50). Arviragus and Guiderius chafe against the limitations of the pastoral life, however,... | |
| Charles DeLoach - 1988 - 576 Seiten
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| James Joyce - 1998 - 1060 Seiten
...play pales into insignificance. 203.16 reverence, the angel of the world: Cymheline, 1v. ii. 247-9: 'reverence | (That angel of the world) doth make distinction | Of place 'tween high and low'. 203.17-18 Why is the underplot . . . history: Stephen suggests, after GB, that the principal Lear plot... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2000 - 196 Seiten
...boys, And though he came our enemy, remember He was paid for that. Though mean and mighty, rotting 246 Together, have one dust, yet reverence, That angel of the world, doth make distinction 248 Of place 'tween high and low. Our foe was princely, And though you took his life as being our foe,... | |
| Howard B. White - 1970 - 174 Seiten
...mean and mighty, rotting Together, have one dust, yet reverence 27 Nicomachean Ethics 11233 34 ff. (That angel of the world) doth make distinction Of place 'tween high, and low. (IV, ii, 246-49) And Guiderius feels the same way, only more so. He threatens to "tell the fishes he's... | |
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