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QUOTES FROM THE BARD
PLAY: Antony and Cleopatra
ACT/SCENE: 3.13
SPEAKER: Antony
CONTEXT:
ANTONY
You have been a boggler ever.
But when we in our viciousness grow hard—
Oh, misery on ’t!— the wise gods seel our eyes,
In our own filth drop our clear judgments, make us
Adore our errors, laugh at ’s while we strut
To our confusion.
CLEOPATRA
Oh, is ’t come to this?
ANTONY
I found you as a morsel cold upon
Dead Caesar’s trencher. Nay, you were a fragment
Of Gneius Pompey’s, besides what hotter hours,
Unregistered in vulgar fame, you have
Luxuriously picked out. For I am sure,
Though you can guess what temperance should be,
You know not what it is.
DUTCH:
Ik vond u als een koud geworden bete
Op Caesar’s bord; gij waart een kliekjen van
Cneus Pompeius’ tafel, om van uren
Van hartstocht nu te zwijgen, die ge in stilte
Wellustig hebt besteed; want, dit is zeker,
Hoewel gij gissen moogt, wat kuischheid is,
Gekend hebt gij ze nooit.
MORE:
Proverb: When God will punish he will first take away the understanding
Boggler=Equivocator, swerver, waverer
Seel=Close, blind
Confusion=Ruin
Trencher=Wooden plate
Fragment=Remnant, scrap
Vulgar fame=Common gossip
Luxuriously=Lustfully
Temperance=Modesty, chastity
Compleat:
To boggle=Haperen, stameren
He did not boggle at all at it=Hij stond ‘er niet verzet voor
To seel a hawk=Eenen valk een kap voor de oogen doen
Trencher=Tafelbord, houten tafelbord
Fragment=Een brok, stuk, afbreeksel
Vulgar=(common) Gemeen
Luxuriously=Weeldriglyk; overdaadiglyk
Temperance=Maatigheyd
Topics: proverbs and idioms, excess, reputation, judgment, ruin
ACT/SCENE: 3.13
SPEAKER: Antony
CONTEXT:
ANTONY
You have been a boggler ever.
But when we in our viciousness grow hard—
Oh, misery on ’t!— the wise gods seel our eyes,
In our own filth drop our clear judgments, make us
Adore our errors, laugh at ’s while we strut
To our confusion.
CLEOPATRA
Oh, is ’t come to this?
ANTONY
I found you as a morsel cold upon
Dead Caesar’s trencher. Nay, you were a fragment
Of Gneius Pompey’s, besides what hotter hours,
Unregistered in vulgar fame, you have
Luxuriously picked out. For I am sure,
Though you can guess what temperance should be,
You know not what it is.
DUTCH:
Ik vond u als een koud geworden bete
Op Caesar’s bord; gij waart een kliekjen van
Cneus Pompeius’ tafel, om van uren
Van hartstocht nu te zwijgen, die ge in stilte
Wellustig hebt besteed; want, dit is zeker,
Hoewel gij gissen moogt, wat kuischheid is,
Gekend hebt gij ze nooit.
MORE:
Proverb: When God will punish he will first take away the understanding
Boggler=Equivocator, swerver, waverer
Seel=Close, blind
Confusion=Ruin
Trencher=Wooden plate
Fragment=Remnant, scrap
Vulgar fame=Common gossip
Luxuriously=Lustfully
Temperance=Modesty, chastity
Compleat:
To boggle=Haperen, stameren
He did not boggle at all at it=Hij stond ‘er niet verzet voor
To seel a hawk=Eenen valk een kap voor de oogen doen
Trencher=Tafelbord, houten tafelbord
Fragment=Een brok, stuk, afbreeksel
Vulgar=(common) Gemeen
Luxuriously=Weeldriglyk; overdaadiglyk
Temperance=Maatigheyd
Topics: proverbs and idioms, excess, reputation, judgment, ruin