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" That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world ; my heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord : I saw Othello's visage in his mind ; And to his honours, and his valiant parts,... "
The Works of Shakespeare: In Eight Volumes : Collated with the Oldest Copies ... - Page 251
by William Shakespeare - 1762
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Shakespeare: A Critical Study of His Mind and Art

Edward Dowden - 1875 - 448 pages
...what to herself seemed " downright violence," to unite itself with the inmost being of the Moor : — That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world ; my heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord;...
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Othello

William Shakespeare - Drama - 1968 - 244 pages
...let me find a charter in your voice T'assist my simpleness. DUKE What would you ? Speak. DESDEMONA That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world. My heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord....
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Othello As Tragedy: Some Problems of Judgement and Feeling

Jane Adamson - Drama - 1980 - 316 pages
...love for Othello before the Senate was as revealing as Othello's way of describing his love for her: That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world. My heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord....
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The Heroic Idiom of Shakespearean Tragedy

James C. Bulman - Drama - 1985 - 276 pages
...soldier's life, so, in Shakespeare, she pleads with the Senate. Her language is as absolute as Othello's: That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world. Her images conjure up the martial glory, disastrous chances,...
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Othello

William Shakespeare - Drama - 1992 - 180 pages
...let me find a charter in your voice T'assist my simpleness. DUKE What would you, Desdemona? DESDEM. That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and scorn of fortunes40 May trumpet to the world. My heart's subdued 250 1,3 I saw Othello's visage in...
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The Lady Vanishes: Subjectivity and Representation in Castiglione and Ariosto

Valeria Finucci - Literary Criticism - 1992 - 352 pages
...tool. PART II Ariosto CHAPTER FOUR The Narcissistic Woman: Angelica and the Mystique of Femininity That I did love the Moor, to live with him, My downright violence, and scom of fortunes, May tmmpet to the world: my heart's subdued Even to the utmost pleasure of my lord....
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Otello. Testo originale a fronte

William Shakespeare - Drama - 1996 - 324 pages
...let me find a charter in your voice T'assist my simpleness. DUKE What would you ? Speak. DESDEMONA That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world. My heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord....
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Othello

William Shakespeare, Alan Durband - Drama - 2014 - 330 pages
...me find a charter in your voice To assist my simpleness. Duke What would you, Desdemona? Desdemona That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes 275 May trumpet to the world. My heart's subdued Even to the very quality of my lord....
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Shakespeare's Tragedies and Modern Critical Theory

James Cunningham - Drama - 1997 - 252 pages
...Greenblatt cites Desdemona's speech to the Senate in 1.3, using MR Ridley's 1958 Arden edition of the play: That I did love the Moor, to live with him, My downright violence, and storm of fortunes, May trumpet to the world: my heart's subdued Even to the utmost pleasure of my lord....
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Shakespeare's Reading

Robert S. Miola - Literary Criticism - 2000 - 206 pages
...her duty to father, she nevertheless asserts that she owes more to husband. She defies convention: 'That I did love the Moor to live with him, My downright violence and storm of fortunes May trumpet to the world' (1. 3. 248-50). Fearlessly defying father and senators,...
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