The Enchanted Glass: The Elizabethan Mind in LiteratureBlackwell, 1952 - 293 頁 |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 40 筆
第 80 頁
... less insistent and a less mysterious dread . Though we do much in our society to repeat the violence 24 of six- teenth - century England , Ireland , France , and Scot- land , there is in modern life much more security than during the ...
... less insistent and a less mysterious dread . Though we do much in our society to repeat the violence 24 of six- teenth - century England , Ireland , France , and Scot- land , there is in modern life much more security than during the ...
第 98 頁
... less impor- tant for reform than the scoffings of Rabelais 18 and certainly less significant than the rationalistic attitude of Montaigne.19 The usual attitude perhaps is that of Seneca , who has in him a great deal of genuine scepti ...
... less impor- tant for reform than the scoffings of Rabelais 18 and certainly less significant than the rationalistic attitude of Montaigne.19 The usual attitude perhaps is that of Seneca , who has in him a great deal of genuine scepti ...
第 123 頁
... less highly trained type , manifest only the older undeveloped stage of psycho- logical study . Dekker , for example , was a less learned psychologist than were his contemporaries ; whereas Ford seems to have made a most extensive and ...
... less highly trained type , manifest only the older undeveloped stage of psycho- logical study . Dekker , for example , was a less learned psychologist than were his contemporaries ; whereas Ford seems to have made a most extensive and ...
內容
CHAPTER PAGE I THE UNIVERSAL NATURE OF THINGS I | 1 |
DERIVATIONS AND INFERENCES | 32 |
PREOCCUPATIONS AND PREJUDGMENTS | 61 |
9 個其他區段未顯示
其他版本 - 查看全部
常見字詞
Advancement of Learning æsthetic Agrippa Anatomy of Melancholy ancient Arcandam Aristotelian Aristotle aspect astrology authors Bacon believe bethan body Burton Cæsar Cambridge cause chap Chapman classical cosmology criticism culture Dekker divine doctrine drama elements Eliza Elizabethan literature England English ethics example expression formal heart heavens Honest Whore Hooker human idea important interpretation John Caius Jonson Julius Cæsar knowledge less literary live logic London magic man's matter ment mind modern Montaigne moral motion nature Neo-Platonism Othello passim passion philosophy plays Plutarch poets political practical principles psychology Quintilian Ramist Ramus reason religion Renais Renaissance Renaissance learning rhetoric Richard Hooker sance Scriptures seems Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's significant Sir Philip Sidney sixteenth century soul speak Spenser spirits Stoicism theory things thinkers Thomas Thomas Moffett thought tion true truth universe virtue vols Wendoll writers