| G. Wilsin Knight - 2002 - 368 页
...conclude the play. Hence also the Duke's speech in As You Like It: Here feel we but the penalty of Adam, The seasons' difference, as the icy fang And churlish...shrink with cold, I smile and say 'This is no flattery . . .'. (ni 5) Therefore Hell itself in Claudio's speech is imaged in terms not only of fire but of... | |
| Allardyce Nicoll - 2002 - 208 页
...the central idea of our production, and its optimism is expressed in the words of the banished Duke: the winter's wind, Which, when it bites and blows...counsellors That feelingly persuade me what I am. The polarity of sadness and joy, of reason and heart, was therefore the leading principle of the staging... | |
| Stanley Wells - 2002 - 228 页
...still. The uncivil world is alone real. When the wind blows till it bites, Duke Senior tells us he can smile and say, 'This is no flattery: these are counsellors / That feelingly persuade me what I am.' But he says all this in an obtrusively formal manner, and at the end of his speech, Amiens, the courtier,... | |
| Arthur F. Kinney - 2004 - 196 页
...play composed just before Hamlet. Duke Senior says of Ardenne: Here feel we not the penalty of Adam, The seasons' difference, as the icy fang And churlish...cold, I smile and say, "This is no flattery: these are my counsellors That feelingly persuade me what I am." Such lessons lead him to conclude that one "[f]inds... | |
| Ross W. Duffin - 2004 - 536 页
...Cambridge. DUKE SENIOR: The season's difference, as the Icy fang And churlish chiding of the winters wind, Which when it bites and blows upon my body Even...counsellors That feelingly persuade me what I am. (P) As You Like It 2.1 Ofc, JAQUES: I must have liberty Withal, as large a Charter as the wind, To... | |
| George Ian Duthie - 2005 - 216 页
...not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? Here feel we not the penalty of Adam1 The seasons' difference? — as the icy fang And churlish...counsellors That feelingly persuade me what I am." (II, i, iu) What he asks in line 5 is — do we not here in Arden suffer those afflictions to which... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2005 - 900 页
...not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? Here feel we not the penalty of Adam, The seasons' difference? As the icy fang And churlish...and say 'This is no flattery: these are counsellors 10 That feelingly persuade me what I am. ' Sweet are the uses of adversity, Which like the toad, ugly... | |
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