 | Walter Scott - 2000 - 516 trang
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 | Edgar Allan Poe, Thomas Ollive Mabbott, Eleanor D. Kewer - 2000 - 1451 trang
...of thing." 17. The passage that follows this in the first version echoes Macbeth, V, viii, 21-22 : "That keep the word of promise to our ear/ And break it to our hope." 18. For the canceled reference to Tacitus and Montesquieu, see "The Man that Was Used Up," note 22.... | |
 | Harry Pauley - 2000 - 460 trang
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 | Geoffrey Hughes - 2000 - 452 trang
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 | Richard L. Harp, Richard Harp, Stanley Stewart, Cambridge University Press - 2000 - 218 trang
...woman," he responds with an attack on the "juggling fiends" that "palter with us in a double sense, / That keep the word of promise to our ear, / And break it to our hope" (5.8.19-22). All these figures of equivocation are related to the overriding kind of doubleness that... | |
 | Melvin J. Lasky - 478 trang
...can't even sing!" And be these juggling fiends no more believ'd That palter with us in a double sense; That keep the word of promise to our ear. And break it to our hope. (Macbeth, V.vii.48) In London, as I recall, this kind of fiendish thing is more politely received.... | |
 | 1984
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 | Hubert Harrison - 2001 - 473 trang
...freedom. Freedom to them has been like one of "those juggling fiends That palter with us in double sense; That keep the word of promise to our ear, And break it to our hope." In this connection, some explanation of the former political solidarity of those Negroes who were voters... | |
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