| Susan J. Rosowski - 1996 - 316 páginas
...humanity's fickle memory, noting that the public quickly forgets anyone whom it cannot see: "Titne hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, / Wherein he...oblivion, / A great-sized monster of ingratitudes" (3.3.146-47, emphasis added). We cannot determine whether or not Willa Gather intentionally altered... | |
| Maurice Whelan - 2003 - 220 páginas
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| A. T. Robertson - 2003 - 422 páginas
...that they were not so much \f\pcn (spouseless) as ттfjpаi (pouchless). He cites also Shakespeare10 "Time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back, wherein he puts alms for oblivion."" the seventy (Luke 10:7), only with the term meaning "reward," Luабoû, instead of "food," тpофг|с.... | |
| Fārūq Shūshah - 2003 - 114 páginas
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| Michael Spitzer - 2004 - 392 páginas
...considers a well-known metaphor from Troilus and Cressida, by which Shakespeare compares time to a beggar: "time hath, my lord, a wallet at his back wherein he puts alms for oblivion" ( 164). In seeing time as a beggar, we must suspend its normal reference to physical reality in order... | |
| John Scanlan - 2005 - 212 páginas
...guiding our conduct - as the only means, indeed, of postponing the eventual corrosive decline: •£ 0> Time hath, my Lord, a wallet at his back Wherein he...as soon As done. Perseverance, dear my Lord, Keeps honour bright: to have done, is to hang Quite of fashion, like a rusty nail.46 Thus, to avoid being... | |
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