| Mark Jay Mirsky - 1994 - Liczba stron: 182
...must send / Those that we bury back, our monuments / Shall be the maws of kites. . . . The time has been / That, when the brains were out, the man would die, / And there's an end! But now they rise again. ..." (3.4.87-89 and 96-98). From the very beginning of Macbeth,... | |
| Naomi Conn Liebler - 1995 - Liczba stron: 290
...inside-out is not a pretty sight. The image appears again when Macbeth sees Banquo's ghost: "the time has been, / That, when the brains were out, the man would die, / And there an end; but now they rise again" (III.iv.77-9). Inversion is inextricable in this play from paradox and contradiction. The... | |
| Whittaker Chambers - 1996 - Liczba stron: 408
...Stanislav Kossior, Antonov-Avseenko — I heard my mind saying to itself in these words from Macbeth, The times have been That, when the brains were out,...the man would die, And there an end; but now they rise again. . . . I took up Victor Serge and lived back, line by line, over the struggle I had known... | |
| Ulla Heine - 1996 - Liczba stron: 220
...Leiden erzählen, um das Schicksal abzuwenden, das ihm [...] zugetragen wird."136 Die "The time has been, that, when the brains were out, the man would die, and there an end; but now, they rise again, with twenty mortal murders on their crowns, and push us trom our stools. This is more strange... | |
| Peter J. Leithart - 1996 - Liczba stron: 288
...Banquo. People are very hard to kill in Shakespeare. Well might Macbeth long for the good old days when the brains were out the man would die, And there an end; but now they rise again, With twenty mortal murders on their crowns, And push us from our stools. (3.4.79-82) Caesar,... | |
| Philip Sheldon Foner, Robert J. Branham - 1998 - Liczba stron: 952
...her funeral dirge, she will rise before their scared visages, and make them cry out with Macbeth — 'The times have been That when the brains were out,...the man would die, And there an end: but now they rise again With twenty mortal murders on their crowns, And push us from our stools.' I am aware, sir,... | |
| Gillian Murray Kendall - 1998 - Liczba stron: 232
...Banquo, like Caesar, returns, and Macbeth discovers the limits of physical suppression: The time has been. That when the brains were out, the man would die, And there an end; but now they rise again With twenty mortal murthers on their crowns, And push us from our stools. (3.4.77-81) Suppressions... | |
| Jill Robbins - 1999 - Liczba stron: 210
..."no exit" from existence, its phantom return through the fissures through which one has driven it. "The times have been, that when the Brains were out, the man would dye, and there an end; But now they rise again . . . and push us from our stools. This is more strange... | |
| Orson Welles - 2001 - Liczba stron: 342
...gentle weal; Ay, and since too, murders have been performed Too terrible for the ear. The time has been, That, when the brains were out, the man would die, And there an end. But now they rise again, With twenty mortal murders on their crowns.22 HECATE But why stands Macbeth thus amazedly?23... | |
| Harold Bloom - 2001 - Liczba stron: 750
...gentle weal; / Ay, and since too, murthers have been perform'd /Too terrible for the ear: the time has been, /That, when the brains were out, the man would die, / And there an end; but now, they rise again, / With twenty mortal murthers on their crowns, / And push us from our stools. This is more... | |
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