| Agnes Heller - 2002 - 390 pàgines
...realist answers: "There is a history in all men's lives / Figuring the natures of the times deceased; / The which observed, a man may prophesy, / With a near...the main chance of things / As yet not come to life, who in their seeds / And weak beginnings lie in treasured. / Such things become the hatch and brood... | |
| Rob Jackson - 2002 - 198 pàgines
...pact and swallowed Czechoslovakia anyway; World War II began soon after with the invasion of Poland. There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceas'd; The which observ'd, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As yet not come to life.... | |
| Hugh Grady - 2002 - 320 pàgines
...Warwick's Machiavellian-Montaignean insistence that with keen observation and reason, political men might prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As yet not come to life, who in their seeds And weak beginnings lie intreasured. (3.1.77-80) We can take these lines as a sober,... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2002 - 244 pàgines
...with the time, and the spirits of the wise sit in the clouds and mock us. Prince— 2 Henry IV II.ii There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceas'd; The which observ'd, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As yet not come to life,... | |
| Donald R. Kelley, David Harris Sacks - 1997 - 408 pàgines
...historical imagination in early modern Britain Introduction DONALD R. KELLEY AND DAVID HARRIS SACKS There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceas'd. - Henry IV, Part 2, 1.1.80-81 . . . imagination bodies forth The forms of things unknown. . . . - A... | |
| Ignatius Donnelly - 2002 - 508 pàgines
[ El contingut d’aquesta pàgina està restringit ] | |
| Wystan Hugh Auden - 2002 - 428 pàgines
...the voyage of their life Is bound in shallows and in miseries. {Julius Caesar, IV.iii.2 18-21] (33) There is a history in all men's lives, Figuring the nature of the times deceased; The which observed, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things As... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1989 - 1286 pàgines
...corruption:' — so went on, Foretelling this same time's condition, And the division of our amity. WARWICK. uciness will jet upon my love, And make a common r^my serious hou tunes deceased; The which observed, a man may prophesy, With a near aim, of the main chance of things... | |
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