| Brian Vickers - 2005 - 472 ページ
...vii): 'Fie, my lord, fiel A soldier, and afeard?' to his confidence in his 'barefaced power' (III, i): 'What need we fear who knows it when none can call our power to account,' and lastly to a state of horror some time after the murder: 'Yet who would have thought the old man... | |
| Anna Murphy Jameson - 2005 - 472 ページ
...may but feel and see and smell blood; and wonder at the unquenched stream that she still wades in — "Who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?" — and fly, hunted through the nights by that "knocking at the door," which beats the wearied life... | |
| Robert S. Matson - 2004 - 260 ページ
...using protein chips, Nat. Genetics, 26, 283-289, 2000. chapter four Arraying processes Lady Macbeth: Out, damned spot! out, I say! — One: two: why, then, 'tis time to do't. William Shakespeare The Tragedy of Macbeth Introduction An array is simply a collection of small spots... | |
| John Russell Brown - 2005 - 280 ページ
...directly but only in these metaphors. The concern she voices is that they should not be called to account: 'What need we fear who knows it, when none can call our pow'r to account' (11.37-8). Her 'infected' mind discharges its 'secrets' to her 'deaf pillow (11.70-1).... | |
| |