WebbAs You Like It · III v 111 · Verse Phebe Think not I love him, though I ask for him. 'Tis but a peevish boy; yet he talks well; But what care I for words? yet words do well, When he that … WebbYou are a thousand times more handsome than she is. It's fools like you who fill the world with ugly children by marrying women like her. It's not her mirror but you who flatters her, …
All speeches (lines) for Phebe in "As You Like It" : : Open Source ...
WebbPhoebe mocks Silvius’s hyperbolic language, asking why he fails to fall down if her eyes are the murderers he claims them to be. Silvius assures her that the wounds of love are invisible, but Phoebe insists that the shepherd not approach her again until she too can feel these invisible wounds. WebbMonologues As You Like It Phoebe Think not I love him, though I ask for h... Think not I love him, though I ask for h... As You Like It Phoebe See more monologues from William Shakespeare Overview Text Videos Related Products Useful Articles Overview Key Information Show As You Like It Character Phoebe Gender Female Age Range Young … dr kevin hastings johnson city ny
Phoebe
WebbCharacter Phoebe Show As You Like It Gender Female Age Range Young Adult, Adult Role Size Supporting Voice Spoken Time & Place france, forest of arden Tags shepherdess shakespeare french love romance Analysis A young shepherdess who falls madly in love with Ganymede READ MORE - PRO MEMBERS ONLY WebbThe encounter between Silvius and Phebe is a satire on conventional love — that is, the lady feels that she is superior to her lover, and her lover, in anguish, swears to die if he is denied her love. The scene also satirizes Silvius and Phebe … Webb'Sweet youth, I pray you, chide a year together: / I had rather hear you chide than this man woo.' (Phoebe, 3:5) Phoebe is desperate for ‘Ganymede’ to understand how she feels, sending her a letter describing ‘this love in me’. Silvius … dr kevin hart northwestern