| Stanley Wells - 1995 - 424 pàgines
...without him, he meditates on how much happier he would be as a peasant than as a king. O God! Methinks it were a happy life To be no better than a homely...Thereby to see the minutes how they run: How many makes the hour full complete, How many hours brings about the day, How many days will finish up the... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1995 - 136 pàgines
...breast, Yet neither conqueror nor conquered. So is the equal poise of this fell war. O God! methinks it were a happy life To be no better than a homely...point, Thereby to see the minutes how they run How many makes the hour full complete, How many hours brings about the day, How many days will finish up the... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1996 - 1290 pàgines
...were dead! if God's good will were so; For what is in this world but grief and woe? О God! methinks ll of vexation come I, makes the hour full complete; Hew many hours brings about the day; How many days will finish up the... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1989 - 1286 pàgines
...were dead! if God's good will were so; For what is in this world bur grief and woe? О God! methinks t sing. HOTSPUR. 'Tis the next way to turn tailor,...and so, come in when ye will. [Exit. OWEN GLENDOWER. makes the hour full complete; How many hours brings about the day; How many days will finish up the... | |
| Wystan Hugh Auden - 2002 - 428 pàgines
...were dead, if God's good will were so! For what is in this world but grief and woe? O God! methinks it were a happy life To be no better than a homely...Thereby to see the minutes how they run — How many makes the hour full complete, How many hours brings about the day, How many days will finish up the... | |
| Richard Dutton, Alison Gail Findlay, Richard Wilson - 2003 - 286 pàgines
...to studdy'. 21 Robert Parsons and the plight of Shakespeare's first Lancastrian king O God! Methinks it were a happy life To be no better than a homely...by point, Thereby to see the minutes how they run. (3 Henry VI i.^.21-^) 22 These are the words of Shakespeare's first Lancastrian king, Henry VI, in... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2007 - 1288 pàgines
...were dead! if God's good will were so; For what is in this world but grief and woe? O God! methinks makes the hour full complete; How many hours brings about the day; How many days will finish up the... | |
| John F. McDiarmid - 2007 - 328 pàgines
...figure of Henry, isolated from the fighting, muses on the pains of high office. He states a desire to be 'no better than a homely swain, / To sit upon...point, / Thereby to see the minutes how they run' (II, iii, 22-5). 26 His reverie is rudely disturbed by the entry of 'A Sonne that hath kill'd his Father,... | |
| Patrick Cheney - 2007
...important, because it features Henry VI as a Spenserian author-figure, the shepherdking: 'O god! methinks it were a happy life / To be no better than a homely...now, / To carve out dials quaintly, point by point' (3 Henry VI 2. 5. 21-4). 2I But Richard II warrants close attention as well; the King's commitment... | |
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