The line is a quote from Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar(Act 1, scene 2):
Cassius:
The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars
but in ourselves, that we are underlings.
Cassius is using the argument that men are responsible for their choices and actions, not some predestined fate. He is convincing Brutus to join the senators who will assassinate Caesar, in order to prevent the ruler's acquisition of absolute power over Rome.
PROCTOR: In her life, sir, she have never lied. There are them that cannot sing, and them who cannot weep--my wife cannot lie.
Romeo: I dream'd a dream to-night. Mercutio: And so did I. Romeo: Well, what was yours? Mercutio: That dreamers often lie. Romeo: In bed asleep, while they do dream things true.
"I shall be content to lie beside a brother whom I love. We have only a little time to please the living, but all eternity to love the dead" she says this as planning to bury her brother Polynices against the king's wishes.
One epitaph in "On My First Son" that can be considered epigrammatic is a quote the speaker uses to tell his son to go ahead and rest. This epitaph is, "Here doth lie Ben Jonson, his best piece of poetry," where he speaks as though his son is an objet d'art.
what lie does don juan tell claudio
There is only one way to spell the word "lie".
the past of lie
It literally means what it says...Repeating a lie does not make it turn into a truth. A lie is still a lie.
George Washington
The present tense spelling for "lie down" is "lie down."
The letters spell helix. They also spell hex and lie.
Yes, many deserts, if not most deserts, have fault lines in the rocks that lie below them.
you can spell lie, and pea.
"When on your couch you lie at rest, you may remember that all the glory of the heavens is open to you." - William Wordsworth
sedimentary rocks lie above the ground
The word is almost always "lie" for all uses, except in the -ing form (lying).
It doesnt matter but the way you spell it is PROPERLY. This is a little trick to remember = P.R.O.P.E.R.L.Y I cannot tell a lie.