| C. Stopes - 2003 - 160 trang
[ Xin lỗi, nội dung trang này bị giới hạn ] | |
| Eva Hänssgen - 2003 - 300 trang
...konstatieren: And be these juggling fiends no more believed That palter with us in a double sense, That keep the word of promise to our ear And break it to our hope. [ . . . ] Though Birnam Wood be come to Dunsinane And thou opposed being of no woman born, Yet I will... | |
| William Shakespeare, Dinah Jurksaitis - 2003 - 156 trang
...death, he says, 'And be these juggling fiends no more believed That palter with us in a double sense, That keep the word of promise to our ear, And break it to our hope.' Shakespeare's plays are full of double sense. Are playwrights juggling fiends? DUNCAN, King of Scotland... | |
| Stanley Cavell - 2003 - 276 trang
...denounce, or pray for, or command disbelief in, the "fiends / That palter with us in a double sense; / That keep the word of promise to our ear, / And break it to our hope" (III, viii, 19—22). The picture here is that to wish to rule out equivocation, the work of witches,... | |
| Sir Walter Scott - 2003 - 486 trang
...of Argyll. 66.30 word of promise ... the ear seeAfnf£rfA,5.8.21-22:Macbeth recognises the witches 'keep the word of promise to our ear,/ And break it to our hope!'. 66.32 the other side of the Tweed by implication, to England. Since the town of Berwick had been English... | |
| Brian Smith - 2002 - 224 trang
...therefore 1 'And be these juggling fiends no more believed, That palter with us in a double sense ; That keep the word of promise to our ear, And break it to our hope.' Act V, Sc. vm that some other person will be 'rightly led" by the same sign, or that the one originally... | |
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