 | Annaliese F. Connolly - 2000 - 128 pagine
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 | William Shakespeare - 2000 - 388 pagine
...excited drive to self-consumption with which their forbidden liaison has always been entangled: These violent delights have violent ends, And in their triumph die like fire and powder, Which as they kiss consume. Romeo 2.5.9-11 Yet, although the streak of self-destructive perversity apparent in Romeo's... | |
 | 1984
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 | Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001
...in love with Rosaline ! His will had come to the clenching point. Ib. sc. 6. Rom. Do thou but close our hands with holy words. Then love-devouring death...what he dare, It is enough I may but call her mine. The precipitancy, which is the character of the play, is well marked in this short scene of waiting... | |
 | Peter Quennell, Hamish Johnson - 2002 - 228 pagine
...is the unwitting agent of the tragedy. Even so, he does offer a prophetic warning to Romeo : These violent delights have violent ends. And in their triumph die; like fire and powder, Which as they kiss consume. The sweetest honey Is loathesome in his own deliciousness. And in the taste confounds... | |
 | Maurice Charney - 2000 - 234 pagine
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 | Jazz - 2001 - 235 pagine
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 | Wells - 2001 - 207 pagine
...transformed into 'the time of love'.4:4 The lovers seek to disregard time and death in their union, 'Then love-devouring death do what he dare It is enough I may but call her mine' (2.5.7-8). Yet this passionate energy also drives the drama to its finale, and Romeo's words link their... | |
 | William Shakespeare - 2001 - 128 pagine
...short minute gives me in her sight. Do thou but close our hands with holy words, Then love - devouring death do what he dare: It is enough I may but call her mine. FRIAR LAURENCE These violent delights have violent ends And in their triumph die, like fire and powder,... | |
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