My desolation does begin to make A better life : Tis paltry to be Caesar; Not being fortune, he's but fortune's knave, A minister of her will ; And it is great To do that thing that ends all other deeds ; Which shackles accidents, and bolts up change;... Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine - Pàgina 4681853Visualització completa - Sobre aquest llibre
| William Shakespeare - 1856 - 464 pàgines
...be Ca-sar ; Not being Fortune, he 's but Fortune's knave, A minister of her will : And it is great To do that thing that ends all other deeds ; Which...palates more the dung, The beggar's nurse and Caesar's," Enter, to the gates of the Monument, PROCUI.EIUJ, GAI.I.US, and Soldiers. Pro. Caesar sends greeting... | |
| Robert S. Miola - 2004 - 264 pàgines
...(V.ii.56-7). And she speaks with the same music of resolution and triumph in her voice: And it is great To do that thing that ends all other deeds, Which...palates more the dung, The beggar's nurse and Caesar's. (V.ii.4-8) Cleopatra here renounces the incessant motion of the sublunary world - the ebb and flow... | |
| Stanley Cavell - 1988 - 430 pàgines
...and the woman at the ending, "And it is great / To do that thing that ends all other deeds, . . ./ Which sleeps, and never palates more the dung, / The beggar's nurse and Caesar's." These imaginings of the earth as feeding its inhabitants, in reciprocation with the imagining of its... | |
| Alida Gersie - 1991 - 348 pàgines
...follow Cleopatra's path, when she says: 'My desolation does begin to make a better life. It is great. To do that thing that ends all other deeds, which shackles accidents and bolts up change.' For it is the certain conviction that one knows what it means to be dead which inspires many a suicide... | |
| Mihoko Suzuki - 1989 - 292 pàgines
...at Cydnus. Thus Cleopatra, by attiring herself in her "crown and all" (5.2.232), succeeds in doing "that thing that ends all other deeds, / Which shackles accidents and bolts up change" (5.2.56); she makes herself a monument — this scene significantly takes 7Shakespeare significantly... | |
| William Shakespeare - 1993 - 166 pàgines
...Caesar; Not being Fortune, he's but Fortune's knave, A minister of her will: and it is great [they go To do that thing that ends all other deeds, Which...change, Which sleeps, and never palates more the dung, 129 The beggar's nurse and Caesar's. Enter PROCULEIUS. As he speaks with CLEOPATRA through the bars,... | |
| James Howe - 1994 - 290 pàgines
...to be Caesar; Not being Fortune, he's but Fortune's knave, A minister of her will: and it is great To do that thing that ends all other deeds, Which...palates more the dung, The beggar's nurse and Caesar's. (5.2.1-8) Worldly success, ambition, outward things in general, all are subject to "accident" and "change."... | |
| Murray Cox, Alice Theilgaard - 1994 - 482 pàgines
...textures - more accurately than the academic technical language of dynamic psychology. 'and it is great To do that thing that ends all other deeds, Which shackles accidents, and bolts up change;' (Antony W Cleopatra V.2.4) In an established analytic group it is not uncommon for questions to be... | |
| Shirley Nelson Garner, Madelon Sprengnether - 1996 - 346 pàgines
...very variety and changeability that have constituted her difference from the Roman ethos. She wishes to "do that thing that ends all other deeds, / Which shackles accidents and bolts up change"; at the last she disclaims even her sex: My resolution's placed, and I have nothing Of woman in me;... | |
| Stanley Wells - 1997 - 438 pàgines
...instance, King Lear) presenting it as an evasion of responsibility: 'it is great', says Cleopatra, To do that thing that ends all other deeds, Which...palates more the dung, The beggar's nurse, and Caesar's. (5.2.5-8) And when the time comes, urged on by the thought of the indignities to which she will be... | |
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