| Charles Clotfelter, Thomas Ehrlich - Business & Economics - 2001 - 580 pages
...giver's, benefit. 1n Measure for Measure, Shakespeare has Duke Vincentio say it better than anyone else: Heaven doth with us as we with torches do, Not light...go forth of us. 'Twere all alike As if we had them not.6 As an aside, one cannot help but be amused by the fact that the US Department of Commerce, in... | |
| Pierce Egan - 1999 - 603 pages
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| William Shakespeare - English drama - 2001 - 632 pages
...application appears to have been noticed, though there is another echoing allusion to it in Sh. himself: "... if our virtues Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike As if we had them not" (Measure for Measure, i.1.34-36). The phraseology in this passage echoes several passages concerning... | |
| George Thaddeus Wright - American poetry - 2001 - 348 pages
...system. As logical thought is built on assumptions from which consequences may be deduced or inferred ("If our virtues / Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike / As if we had them not"—1.1.34-36), so the law's language is built on supposes, on //"-clauses that suppose certain... | |
| Kenneth Muir - Drama - 2002 - 204 pages
...Angelo: There is a kind of character in thy life That to th' observer doth thy history Fully unfold. Thyself and thy belongings Are not thine own so proper...alike As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touch'd But to fine issues; nor nature never lends The smallest scruple of excellence But, like a thrifty... | |
| Allardyce Nicoll - Drama - 2002 - 232 pages
...himself the vertue that went out of him, he turned him about in the press and said. . .who did touch me? Heaven doth with us, as we with torches do, Not light...alike As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touch' d But to fine issues. Whiter even hints at the use of iterative imagery when he remarks21 that... | |
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