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He counts the stars one and all
He counts the stars one and all









he counts the stars one and all

Plastisol Ink Screen Print Transfer, this can be applied to any combination of polyester/cotton, including 100% cotton.ġ. We suggest that you check to make sure your heat on your press is accurate. If your press is too hot, the screen will look faded.

he counts the stars one and all

Use more pressure than what you would use for the low heat transfers. Start at 350 with HEAVY and EVEN pressure and increase the heat by 5 degrees each time if the print is not sticking and repress.ģ75 is recommended from manufacturer for 7 seconds, however we personally use 360. (Full color transfers and will state in the listing HIGH HEAT) He counts the stars and calls them all by name BLACK screen print transferĪLL TRANSFERS MUST BE APPLIED WITH A HEAT PRESS!!! WE ARE NOT RESPONISBLE FOR TRANSFERS APPLIED INCORRECTLY.

  • Koozie (3.5inches on the longest side unless stated otherwise)- Hat transfers.
  • #HE COUNTS THE STARS ONE AND ALL FREE#

    Romeo will take his chances on death, where he hopes to be at peace, his body free at last from the doom of the baleful stars.

    he counts the stars one and all

    And "everlasting rest" means what it still means - death envisioned as eternal peace. my rest" is a phrase used in a card game a player would "set up his rest" when he was done taking cards and ready to bet on what was in his hand. Moments before he kills himself, Romeo gazes upon Juliet and says, "O, here / Will I set up my everlasting rest, / And shake the yoke of inauspicious stars / From this world-wearied flesh" (5.3.109-112). He will win a victory in his struggle with the stars by joining Juliet in death. In Mantua, when Balthasar delivers the news of Juliet's death, Romeo's response is swift and simple: "Is it even so? then I defy you, stars!" (5.1.24). Juliet believes that when Romeo comes to her in the night he will be with her forever, even after her death, shining like stars in the night. Some editors print "when he shall die" instead of "when I shall die," but "I" makes perfectly good sense. That all the world will be in love with nightĪnd pay no worship to the garish sun. Take him and cut him out in little stars,Īnd he will make the face of heaven so fine Waiting for Romeo and speaking to the approaching night, Juliet says, He decides that the brightness of her cheek would outshine the stars, and that "her eyes in heaven / Would through the airy region stream so bright / That birds would sing and think it were not night" (2.2.20-22).

    he counts the stars one and all

    Still comparing Juliet's eyes to stars, Romeo asks himself what would happen if the two stars traded places with Juliet's eyes. It seems to Romeo that two of the brightest stars have decided that they need to leave their spheres for a while, and that they are asking her eyes to twinkle in their places while they are gone. According to the astronomy of the time, each of the planets and all of the stars were embedded in transparent spheres which revolved around the earth. He had thought that her eyes spoke, and he is now saying that they are speaking to the stars, and that the stars are speaking to them. This is a beautiful way of saying that Juliet's eyes are like stars. Standing in the shadows below Juliet's window, Romeo sees her and is about to step forward and speak, but then says to himself, "I am too bold, 'tis not to me she speaks / Two of the fairest stars in all the heaven, / Having some business, do entreat her eyes / To twinkle in their spheres till they return" (2.2.14-17). But, despite his premonitions, Romeo does go into Capulet's house. A fateful chain of events ("consequence hanging in the stars") does begin its appointed time ("date") that night, and that chain of events does terminate the duration ("expire the term") of Romeo's life with premature ("untimely") death. This is a foreshadowing of what actually happens in the rest of the play. With this night's revels and expire the termīut He, that hath the steerage of my course,ĭirect my sail! On, lusty gentlemen. Some consequence yet hanging in the stars He means that the ladies (Juliet among them) will be so beautiful that they will shine like stars come down to earth.Īfter Mercutio's "Queen Mab" speech, Benvolio says that if they don't go into Capulet's soon, they will be too late. Inviting Paris to his feast, Capulet says that there he will see "Earth-treading stars that make dark heaven light" (1.2.25). Such will be the love of Romeo and Juliet, because of the stars. The "cross'd" in "star-cross'd" means hindered, frustrated, thwarted, and defeated. In the Prologue the Chorus explains that two families of Verona are enemies, and that "From forth the fatal loins of these two foes / A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life / Whose misadventured piteous overthrows / Do with their death bury their parents' strife ( Prologue 5-8).











    He counts the stars one and all