| Julie Sanders - 2007 - 243 ページ
...the repeated notes of a sighing alto oboe 'Chi poteva in quel vegliardo / Tanto sangue immaginar?' ('Who would have thought the old man / To have had so much blood in him?'). Lady Macbeth's delivery is also in stark contrast to her earlier assertive and swelling arias, which... | |
| Sam Dowling - 2007 - 90 ページ
...Doctor and a Woman and they talk of her sleepwalking and obsessional washing of hands. ] LADY MACB Out damned spot out I say One two why then tis time to do it. Hell is murky. Fie my Lord fie a soldier and af eared. What need we fear Who knows it when none... | |
| Elliott M. Simon - 2007 - 622 ページ
...rationalization of conscience — "a little water clears us of this deed" (II, ii, 67) — ends in her madness: "Out, damned spot! Out, I say! — One: two: why then 'tis time to do 't.— Hell is murky!" (V, i, 39-40), and her death. 97. In the Epistle to the Philippians 2:12-13,... | |
| Anon - 2008 - 448 ページ
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| N. W. Erickson - 2007 - 253 ページ
...the stain spreading across his chest. "Queer. I can only remember that insane remark of Lady Macbeth: 'Who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?'" "Get an ambulance - quick!" snapped the assistant-surgeon. "No use, young man," smiled Sir Francis... | |
| Robert Fisk - 2008 - 544 ページ
...fearful ravings of the insane Lady Macbeth as she contemplates the stabbing of King Duncan: '. . . who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?' Shakespeare would certainly have witnessed pain and suffering in daily London life. Executions were... | |
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