Bottom: on Shakespeare, 第 1 卷the] Ark Press [for the Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, 1963 - 472 頁 |
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第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 30 筆
第 20 頁
... imagination is conveniently applicable to the unity that Shakespeare's writing attains . Considered as an order of words and of drama , it has , at best , the quality of imagination sufficient in itself ; but when the characters - both ...
... imagination is conveniently applicable to the unity that Shakespeare's writing attains . Considered as an order of words and of drama , it has , at best , the quality of imagination sufficient in itself ; but when the characters - both ...
第 80 頁
... imagination , but not according as they are in the understanding ; which is clearly apparent from the fact that on all those which are in the intellect and not in the imagination , negative names are often bestowed , such as incorporeal ...
... imagination , but not according as they are in the understanding ; which is clearly apparent from the fact that on all those which are in the intellect and not in the imagination , negative names are often bestowed , such as incorporeal ...
第 145 頁
... imagination from the affections ' part , and contract a confederacy between the reason and imagination against the affections ; for the affections themselves carry over an appetite to the good , as reason doth . The difference is , that ...
... imagination from the affections ' part , and contract a confederacy between the reason and imagination against the affections ; for the affections themselves carry over an appetite to the good , as reason doth . The difference is , that ...
內容
PART ONEO that record could with a backward look | 13 |
notes for Her music to Pericles and for a graph of culture | 33 |
PART THREEAN ALPHABET OF SUBJECTS | 95 |
著作權所有 | |
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常見字詞
A. J. Arberry Aristotle Aristotle's Bacon beauty better bird blind body Boethius brain called Catullus cause character Comedy of Errors death definition of love desire doth dream E. G. Browne ears earth existence face Falstaff father Folio Gower grace Greek Hamlet hath hear heart heaven horse human Iago imagination intellect KING kiss lady language light lines live logic look lord Love's Lucretius matter means metaphysical mind nature never night object Othello Ovid passion perhaps Pericles philosopher Phoenix Plato play pleasure poems poet poetry Prince of Tyre Prologue propositions Quarto reason seen sense shadow Shakespeare sight simple sing song Sonnet Sonnet 59 soul sound speak Spinoza sweet tears tell thee Thersites thine eyes things thou thought thru Timaeus tongue translated true truth understanding verse voice William Shakespeare words writing