| Louise Gherasim - 2000 - 402 sayfa
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| Robert Faggen - 2001 - 308 sayfa
...random lesser designs of the several poems. (CPPP, 783). Frost borrows Hamlet's remark to Horatio: "There's a divinity that shapes our ends,/ Rough hew them how we will" (5.ii.10— 11). For Frost - as perhaps also for Hamlet, depending on how you read him - this "divinity"... | |
| David Cregan - 2001 - 212 sayfa
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| Ewan Fernie - 2002 - 274 sayfa
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| Ardian Gill - 2002 - 324 sayfa
...you needn't leave God out of it," and I told him what I'd read in one of the judge's book of plays, "There's a Divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will." Major said, "Let me tell you how a chemist named Boyle put it. Boyle said, 'I do with some confidence... | |
| John Alan Roe - 2002 - 238 sayfa
...know, Our indiscretion sometime serves us well When our deep plots do pall, and that should learn us There's a divinity that shapes our ends, Rough hew them how we will . . . Up from my cabin, My sea-gown scarfed about me, in the dark Groped I to find out them, had my... | |
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