| Wystan Hugh Auden - 2002 - 428 páginas
...o' th' earth doth melt. My lord! 0 wither'd is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fall'n! Young boys and girls Are level now with men. The odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. (IV.xv.63-68) The extraordinary thing about the speech is that it comes after Cleopatra has sold Antony... | |
| Stanley Wells - 2002 - 316 páginas
...th' earth doth melt. My lord! O, withered is the garland of the war. The soldier's pole is fall'n. Young boys and girls Are level now with men. The odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. (4. 16.64-70) In passing it is worth observing that, as modern editors indicate, Cleopatra faints as... | |
| George Wilson Knight - 2002 - 396 páginas
...offence. (iv. xiii. 43) When he dies, the world is ' no better than a sty' (i v. xiii. 62) : . . . young boys and girls Are level now with men; the odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. (iv. xiii. 65) Love gone, the world is now a barren promontory extending its naked irrelevances to... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2004 - 224 páginas
...o'the earth doth melt. My lord? O, withered is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fall'n; young boys and girls Are level now with men. The odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. CHARMIAN O quietness, lady! IRAS She's dead too, our sovereign. CHARMIAN Lady! IRAS Madam! CHARMIAN... | |
| James R. Keller, Leslie Stratyner - 2014 - 208 páginas
...the earth doth melt. My lord! O, wither'd is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fall'n: young boys and girls Are level now with men; the odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon [Ivory 101-102]. The film's appropriation of Antony and Cleopatra creates a parallel between Shakespeare's... | |
| Terry Eagleton - 2006 - 193 páginas
...th' earth doth melt. My lord! O, wither' d is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fall'n! Young boys and girls Are level now with men. The odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. Nothing left remarkable, indeed, except for these ravishing lines themselves, which affirm the possibility... | |
| Tzachi Zamir - 2011 - 251 páginas
...because when he dies she says this: O, wither'd is the garland of the war, The soldier's pole is fall'n: young boys and girls Are level now with men; the odds...nothing left remarkable Beneath the visiting moon. (IV.xv.64-68) And later she says this: His legs bestride the ocean, his rear'd arm Crested the world;... | |
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