Masters
of the people,
Your
multiplying spawn how can he flatter-
That’s
thousand to one good one—when you now see
He
had rather venture all his limbs for honour
Than
one on’s ears to hear it? Proceed, Cominius.
-Menenius
Coriolanus
Act II, Scene ii,
Line 96
Well, I know
what’s going on, but this is a hard line Than one on’s ears to hear it? I
can only assume that on’s is on his. Menenius is asking the
senators how can Coriolanus flatter the masses (of which one in a thousand is
any good) when he’d rather be venturing all his limbs for honour (fighting for
his country) than one of his limbs on his ears to hear it?
Ummmm, gonna need
to look at my book that has the footnotes. I’ll try to get back to you later
today.
Update (day two): Okay, very simple explanation. Than one on's ears to hear it is one of his ears. It's of, not on. So that makes it easy. He'd rather venture all of his limbs for honour than venture one of his ears to hear about that honour. Comprendez?
2 comments:
Why is that one section more eroded than the rest? Is there where water flowed down? (I have no idea how aqueducts work...)
I'm not a viaduct expert, I just play one on tv.
Post a Comment