| Felicity Rosslyn - 2000 - 264 páginas
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| Guillaume de Stexhe, Johan Verstraeten - 2000 - 346 páginas
...the duties one already has: 'Why have my sisters husbands, if they say they love you all? Happily, when I shall wed, that Lord whose hand must take my...carry half my love with him, half my care and duty.' Similarly, to the plea of the disciple who wanted to delay joining Christ, 'Suffer me first to go and... | |
| Henry Charles Lea Professor of History Emeritus Natalie Zemon Davis, Natalie Zemon Davis - 2000 - 210 páginas
...objects to is, on the one hand, the boundlessness of Lear's demand, its limitless obligation ("Haply, when I shall wed, / That lord whose hand must take...carry/ Half my love with him, half my care and duty" 16), and Lear's imagining, on the other, that the quantity of one's love could be put fully into words... | |
| Michael Ignatieff - 2001 - 170 páginas
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| Lloyd Cameron - 2001 - 114 páginas
...unwilling to jeopardise it by proclaiming, like her sisters, that she can only love her father: Happily when I shall wed, That lord whose hand must take my...and duty. Sure, I shall never marry like my sisters. (Act I, Sc. i, lines 95-98) The economic and political consequences for Cordelia are severe. Lear denies... | |
| Kodŭng Kwahagwŏn (Korea). International Conference, Kenji Fukaya - 2001 - 940 páginas
...(1.1.44-7). Cordelia, for her part, indirectly reminds us of the further consequences of marriage: "Happily, when I shall wed, / That lord whose hand must take...carry / Half my love with him, half my care and duty" (99-101). Even more "happily," her allegiance would not actually be so much 'divided' as shared. Hence,... | |
| 1984 - 476 páginas
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