| William Shakespeare - 1996 - 324 pages
...heartily wish this had not so befallen : but since it is as it is, mend it for your own good. C ASS IOI will ask him for my place again; he shall tell me...strange ! Every inordinate cup is unblessed and the ingredience is a devil. IAGO Come, come; good wine is a good familiar creature if 300 it be well used:... | |
| McGuffey - 1997 - 718 pages
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| William Shakespeare, Alan Durband - 2014 - 330 pages
...heartily wish this had not so befallen; but since it is as it is, mend it, for your own good. 305 Cassio I will ask him for my place again; he shall tell me...sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast! Oh, strange! Every inordinate cup is unblessed and the 310 ingredience is a devil. lago Come, come;... | |
| Stanley Wells - 1997 - 438 pages
...brains! That we should with joy, pleasance, revel, and applause transform ourselves into beasts! . . . To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently...inordinate cup is unblessed, and the ingredient is a devil. (2.3.283-6, 298-301) Othello's enemy will enter by the ears, and Othello too will be transformed from... | |
| Michele Lee - 1998 - 440 pages
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| Lynne Magnusson - 1999 - 221 pages
...expectation that he can easily profit from the "show of courtesy" (2.1.99) characteristic of his discourse: "I will ask him for my place again; he shall tell...mouths as Hydra, such an answer would stop them all" (2.3.276-78). A rhetorician able to understand the mechanisms by which the polite Venetian order, instantiated... | |
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