| S. P. Cerasano - 2004 - 228 sayfa
...What dost thou say? SHYLOCK I am content. PORTIA [To NERISSA] Clerk, draw a deed of gift. 390 SHYLOCK I pray you, give me leave to go from hence. I am not...well. Send the deed after me, And I will sign it. DUKE Get thee gone, but do it. 58 The general use of the state, which - if you are humble - could be... | |
| Michele Marrapodi - 2004 - 292 sayfa
...confraternity of Christianity, rather his initiation to salvation includes taunts and jeers: SHYLOCK I pray you give me leave to go from hence. I am not...well. Send the deed after me, And I will sign it. DUKE Get thee gone, but do it. GRAZIANO In christ'ning shalt thou have two godfathers. Had I been judge... | |
| Gareth Armstrong - 2004 - 224 sayfa
...four of the play's twenty scenes; he disappears before the end of the fourth act on a lousy exit line: I pray you, give me leave to go from hence, I am not...well, send the deed after me, And I will sign it. A CASE FOR SHYLOCK And a count reveals that he speaks barely a quarter of Hamlet's lines. I think Burbage... | |
| 彭鏡禧 - 2004 - 504 sayfa
...他退回原本稱呼基督徒的方式V 型。 約二 十行後。 夏洛說出他在這齣戲的最後幾句話: I pray you, give me leave to go from hence; I am not well. Send me the deed after me, And I will sign it. (4-1. 392-94) 求您准許我離開這裡; 我不舒服。... | |
| Julia Reinhard Lupton - 2005 - 291 sayfa
...that borders on discontent: Shylock goes on to say, in what will be his final words in the play, / pray you give me leave to go from hence; I am not well. Send the deed afier me, And I will sign it. (4.1.392-95^ In a recent essay, Hugh Short, arguing for the felt sincerity... | |
| Julia Reinhard Lupton - 2005 - 291 sayfa
...qualified by his palpable discomposure in the very public space to which he will in effect be converted: "I pray you, give me leave to go from hence; / I am not well" (4.1.390-91). In Othello's case, the same selfcircumcising mark that recovenants Othello to Venice... | |
| Colin Butler - 2005 - 217 sayfa
...Amen" (4.1). Shylock's last lines in The Merchant of Venice express the desolation of a broken man:"I pray you give me leave to go from hence, / I am not well" (4.1). All's Well That Ends Well includes the poignancy of Helena begging a kiss from the infuriated... | |
| Graham Bradshaw, T. G. Bishop, Peter Holbrook - 2006 - 980 sayfa
...and thus belongs to the deep history of confessional conflict in the West.) When Shylock requests, "I pray you give me leave to go from hence, / I am not well" (4.1.391-2), Shakespeare indicates just how equivocal - how riddled by discontent - Shylock's stated... | |
| Christa Jansohn - 2006 - 324 sayfa
...justifications of his choice of setting are as follows: he compares Shylock's last words after the court scene ("pray you, give me leave to go from hence. I am not well") with the final words of other Shakespearean heroes who build their own memorial through their final... | |
| James R. Hartman - 2007 - 518 sayfa
...pronounced here. Art thou contented, Jew? What dost thou say? I am content. Clerk, draw up a deed of gift. I pray you give me leave to go from hence. I am not well. Send the deed after me And I will sign it. Get thee gone, but do it. In christ'ning thou shall have two godfathers. Had I been judge, thou shouldst... | |
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