| Francis Joseph Bigger - 1927 - 252 頁
...effigy. ' ' She loved the Church so well, gave largely to it, she thought it would have canopied her bones till doomsday. But all things have their end, churches and cities." Wandering in the woods around, she would glance with hopeful pride on the stout walls and high battlements... | |
| Jonathan Dollimore, Alan Sinfield - 1983 - 406 頁
...interr'd Lov'd the church so well, and gave so largely to't, is They thought it should have canopi'd their bones Till doomsday. But all things have their...diseases like to men, Must have like death that we have. ECHO . Like death that we have. DELIO. Now the echo hath caught you. ANTONIO. It groan'd, methought,... | |
| Margaret Aston - 1984 - 401 頁
...abbey moved Antonio to ruminate in response that 'all things have their end: / Churches, and Citties (which have diseases like to men) / Must have like death that we have'. It was an age of special sensibility to the ruins of time and Antonio enjoyed his contemplation of... | |
| David Lowenthal - 1985 - 522 頁
...and 'bronze disease' make metal corrosion seem an organic malady. As Webster's Antonio remarks, ... all things have their end, Churches and Cities (which...diseases like to men) Must have like death that we have.130 However venerated a relic, its decay is seldom admired. 'Antiquitie I unfainedly honour',... | |
| C. John Sommerville - 1992 - 238 頁
...lie interr'd Lov'd the church so well, and gave so largely to't They thought it should have canopy'd their bones Till doomsday; but all things have their...diseases like to men, Must have like death that we have. (V, iii, 9-19) Secularization cannot be described more clearly than that. Such an awareness of the... | |
| John Webster - 1997 - 196 頁
...injuries Of stormy weather, some men lie interred Loved the church so well, and gave so largely to 't, 15 They thought it should have canopied their bones Till...diseases like to men, Must have like death that we have. Echo. Like death that we have. V.iii.o. I .] See Introduction for the source and handling of this scene... | |
| Eileen Jorge Allman - 1999 - 228 頁
...corrupt and the pure, the ephemeral and the fixed. From that perspective, he can remark to Delio that "all things have their end: / Churches and cities,...like to men, / Must have like death that we have" (5.3.17-19). From Antonio's now liminal life, he can observe the inevitable destruction of human institutions.... | |
| William James Bouwsma - 2002 - 328 頁
...Webster's Duchess of Main, contemplating her sad fate, took such comfort as she could in recalling that all things have their end: Churches and cities, which...diseases like to men Must have like death that we have. Indeed, much that passed for historical investigation in this period aimed to demonstrate the absence... | |
| Richard Dutton, Alison Gail Findlay, Richard Wilson - 2003 - 286 頁
...intensely conscious of all these elements of tranformation: as Antonio in The Duchess of Malfi declared, all things have their end Churches and cities (which...diseases like to men) must have like death that we have. 1 Protestant conviction complicated these feelings: scholarly reformers such as John Bale might loath... | |
| Thomas Page Anderson - 2006 - 252 頁
...court, Which now lies naked to the injuries Of stormy weather, some men lie interred Loved the church so well, and gave so largely to't, They thought it should...diseases like to men. Must have like death that we have. (5.3.9-19) Speaking presumably as a Catholic in the play, Antonio ambivalently reacts to the visible... | |
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