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" Who deserves greatness Deserves your hate ; and your affections are A sick man's appetite, who desires most that Which would increase his evil. He that depends Upon your favours swims with fins of lead, And hews down oaks with rushes. Hang ye ! Trust... "
The Plays of William Shakspeare ... - Page 348
by William Shakespeare, Samuel Johnson, George Steevens - 1785
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Shakespeare's Influence on Sir Walter Scott

Wilmon Brewer - 1925 - 534 pages
...fins of lead, And hews down oaks with rushes. Hang ye? Trust ye? With every minute you do change your mind ; And call him noble that was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland. Scott's offended monarch says, "O Lenox, who would wish to rule This changeling crowd, this common...
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The Cornhill Magazine, Volume 63; Volume 136

William Makepeace Thackeray - Electronic journals - 1927 - 902 pages
...disdains to argue : Where he should find you lions, finds you hares ; Where foxes, geese. Hang ye ! Trust ye ? With every minute you do change a mind ; And...was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland.' He will not adopt even the ordinary electioneering procedure of the political candidate. Says Brutus...
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The Great War Between Athens and Sparta: A Companion to the Military History ...

Bernard William Henderson - Greece - 1927 - 556 pages
...short distance of a condemnation to death," as Beloch himself writes : 2 The common way of the mob ! With every minute you do change a mind, And call him...was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland. The Athenian people had stuck fast by Pericles for many a long year in weal and woe and do not, in...
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The Lion and the Fox: The Rôle of the Hero in the Plays of Shakespeare

Wyndham Lewis - Heroes in literature - 1927 - 340 pages
...fins of lead And hews down oaks with rushes. Trust ye ? Hang ye ! With every minute ye do change your mind, And call him noble that was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland," But since his own small senatorial crowd prove themselves equally undependable, and are separated by...
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Stanford University Publications: University series. Language and literature

1929 - 288 pages
...heade alters faster than the Feltmaker can 72] Marcius [Coriolanus]. .... Trust ye? Cor. i . 1 . 185 With every minute you do change a mind, And call him...was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland. 75] King younger spirits, whose apprehensive All 'si. 2. 60 senses All but new things disdain; whose...
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Much Ado about Nothing

William Shakespeare - Conspiracies - 1929 - 284 pages
...than the Feltmaker can PARALLEL PASSAGES 19 72] Marcius [Coriolanus]. .... Trust ye? Cor. i . 1 . 185 With every minute you do change a mind, And call him...was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland. 75] King younger spirits, whose apprehensive All 'si. 2. 60 senses All but new things disdain ; whose...
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Shakespeare: A Life in Drama

Stanley Wells - Biography & Autobiography - 1995 - 424 pages
...hate him, if not the entire class to which he belongs. He accuses them, above all, of inconstancy: With every minute you do change a mind, And call him...was now your hate, Him vile that was your garland. It is ironical that when eventually they become constant in their hatred of him they force him into...
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The Twentieth Century, Volume 13

English periodicals - 1883 - 1120 pages
...bodies. He that depends TTpon your favours swims with lins of lead, And hews down oaks with rushes. Trust ye ? With every minute, you do change a mind, And call him noble that was uow your bate, Him vile, that was your garland ! It is painful to see the tortuous efforts of Liberal...
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The Cornhill Magazine, Volume 136

William Makepeace Thackeray - Electronic journals - 1927 - 782 pages
...he should find you lions, finds you hares ; Where foxes, geese. • • • • • Hang ye ! Trust ye ? With every minute you do change a mind ; And call him noble that was now your hate, Kim vile that was your garland.' He will not adopt even the ordinary electioneering procedure of the...
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A Critical History of English Literature, Vol. 2, Volume 2

David Daiches - 1979 - 304 pages
...changeableness. There is immense irony in Coriolanus' objection to the variability of the peopleHang ye! Trust ye? With every minute you do change a mind, And call him noble that was now your hatein the light of his own subsequent behavior. Enraged at his banishment, he joins his country's...
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