| François Laroque, Franck Lessay - 1999 - 204 páginas
...many many bodies safe That live and feed upon your majesty. ROSENCRANTZ [...] The cease of majesty Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it. (III.3.8-10/15-17) Le faux roi est seul au milieu de courtisans apeurés et serviles, ce que Hamlet,... | |
| Richard A. Posner - 2009 - 290 páginas
...President, or at least this President, is playing with fire and should know it, for The cease of majesty Dies not alone, but, like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it; it is a massy wheel, Fix'd on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser... | |
| Paul Virilio - 2000 - 124 páginas
...wrote, "The streets of Paris are ablaze all through winter and even of a full moon." The cess of majesty Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it.-' King Sun no longer orchestrated time in town; sunrise and sunset lost their purpose. In the Age of... | |
| Jan H. Blits - 2001 - 420 páginas
...but much more That spirit upon whose weal depends and rests The lives of many. The cess of majesty Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it. Or it is a massy wheel Fix'd on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand... | |
| Klingon Language Institute - 2001 - 236 páginas
...'noyance;but much more That spirit upon whose weal depend and rest The lives of many. The cease of majesty Dies not alone but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it: it is a massy wheel, Fix'd on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2001 - 304 páginas
...but much more That spirit upon whose weal depends and rests The lives of many. The cease of majesty Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it. It is a massy wheel, Fix'd on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2001 - 212 páginas
...more 14 That spirit upon whose weal depends and rests 15 The lives of many. The cess of majesty 16 Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it; or it is a massy wheel Fixed on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2001 - 778 páginas
...make as fierce As waters to the sucking of a gulf.' And Hamlet, III, iii, 16, 'The cease of majesty Dies not alone; but, like a gulf, doth draw What's near it with it.' — CASE (Araen Sh.) also quotes in illustration, 'resemblynge a bottomles goolphe, receyvinge all... | |
| Adriana Cavarero - 2002 - 246 páginas
...body. As the treacherous Rosencrantz says with an uncanny mechanical metaphor: The cess of majesty Dies not alone, but like a gulf doth draw What's near it with it. ... . . . which when it falls, Each small annexment, petty consequence, Attends the boist'rous [ruin].... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2002 - 244 páginas
...Hamlet Li Something is rotten in the state of Denmark. Marcellus — Hamlet I.iv The cess of majesty Dies not alone; but, like a gulf, doth draw What's near it with it: it is a massy wheel, Fix'd on the summit of the highest mount, To whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser... | |
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