| Stanley Wells - 1997 - 438 pàgines
...suffering that he is already beginning to undergo: Had I but died an hour before this chance I had lived a blessed time, for from this instant There's nothing...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. (2.3.90-5) At this stage we still hear some of the hyperbole of conscious dissimulation; later comes... | |
| Reto Luzius Fetz, Roland Hagenbüchle, Peter Schulz - 1998 - 1414 pàgines
...ungeheurer Akt der Heuchelei, andererseits eine Äußerung von beispielloser poetischer Intensität: Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had liv'da...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. (II.3.91-96) Nie zuvor hat Shakespeare sich einen Heuchler mit solcher authentischer Sprachgewalt ausdrücken... | |
| R. A. Foakes - 2000 - 332 pàgines
...thence The life o' th' building. Macbeth. Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had lived a blessed time; for from this instant There's nothing...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. (2.3.66-69, 91-96) The problem posed by not being able to judge the sincerity of the speaker by his... | |
| Orson Welles - 2001 - 342 pàgines
...slumps wretchedly into it.) MACBETH Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had lived a bless'd time; for from this instant There's nothing serious...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of.39 62 Orson Welles on Shakespeare ( There is more of the light of pale, early dawn. A figure appears... | |
| Allardyce Nicoll - 2002 - 212 pàgines
...words which are meant to deceive but which curiously at the same time express his deepest feelings : Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had liv'da...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. 'Macbeth intends', says Murry, 'the monstrous hypocrisy of a conventional lament for Duncan; but as... | |
| George Wilson Knight - 1958 - 336 pàgines
...trumpet blow his blast, Particularities and petty sounds To cease ! (2 Henry VI, v. ii. 40) Compare Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had liv'da...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. (Macbeth, n. iii. 98) The association of sudden death with the 'last day' occurs, too, in Macduff's... | |
| Catherine Mulholland - 2002 - 476 pàgines
...imagination and leadership today." THE AFTERMATH Had I but died an hour before this chance I had lived a blessed time; for, from this instant, There's nothing...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. Macbeth Lillian Darrow, a native of Newark, New Jersey, had come to California in 1921 and as a young... | |
| Agnes Heller - 2002 - 390 pàgines
...It is here that he first speaks of time: "Had I but died an hour before this chance / I had lived a blessed time, for from this instant / There's nothing...and the mere lees / Is left this vault to brag of" (Macbeth 2.3.89—95). For the exister called Macbeth, the existential beginning and end coincide,... | |
| Millicent Bell - 2002 - 316 pàgines
...now reverberates in earnest, Macbeth says, Had I but died an hour before this chance, I had lived a blessed time, for from this instant, There's nothing...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. This eloquent statement of a kind of death, a stopping of time such as he has not foreseen, in which... | |
| Benjamin Kilborne - 2002 - 218 pàgines
...He is a prey to Kierkegaardian dread. As Shakespeare's Macbeth says when he has murdered the king, For from this instant there's nothing serious in mortality:...drawn, and the mere lees Is left this vault to brag of. (Hi) For Kierkegaard, "a self is what it has as a standard of measurement."-"1 By murdering the king,... | |
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