Montaigne and Shakespeare and Other Essays on Cognate QuestionsClassic Textbooks, 1909 - 358 頁 |
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第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 16 筆
第 39 頁
... suppose him to have at this stage completed his refashioning of the older play , which is un- doubtedly the substratum of his.1 We must therefore keep closely in view the divergences between this text and that of the Second Quarto ...
... suppose him to have at this stage completed his refashioning of the older play , which is un- doubtedly the substratum of his.1 We must therefore keep closely in view the divergences between this text and that of the Second Quarto ...
第 85 頁
... suppose that Shakespeare owed to Montaigne the thought put in the lines " Or that the everlasting had not fixed His canon ' gainst self - slaughter . " Commentators have naïvely wondered to what canon " Hamlet alludes . It is presumably ...
... suppose that Shakespeare owed to Montaigne the thought put in the lines " Or that the everlasting had not fixed His canon ' gainst self - slaughter . " Commentators have naïvely wondered to what canon " Hamlet alludes . It is presumably ...
第 126 頁
... suppose Shakespeare a reader of the Senecan tragedies ; and even were it otherwise , the passage in question is a figure of speech rather than a reflection on life or a stimulus to such reflection . And the same holds good of the other ...
... suppose Shakespeare a reader of the Senecan tragedies ; and even were it otherwise , the passage in question is a figure of speech rather than a reflection on life or a stimulus to such reflection . And the same holds good of the other ...
第 138 頁
... suppose that Shakespeare got his thought at second or third hand . Thus the famous passage in HENRY V1 in which the Archbishop figures the State as a divinely framed harmony of differing functions , is clearly traceable to Plato's ...
... suppose that Shakespeare got his thought at second or third hand . Thus the famous passage in HENRY V1 in which the Archbishop figures the State as a divinely framed harmony of differing functions , is clearly traceable to Plato's ...
第 190 頁
... suppose that the lines convey Shakespeare's own belief in ghosts . Montaigne had indicated his doubts on 1 B. I , Ch . 26 . that head even in protesting against sundry denials of strange 190 Montaigne and Shakespeare.
... suppose that the lines convey Shakespeare's own belief in ghosts . Montaigne had indicated his doubts on 1 B. I , Ch . 26 . that head even in protesting against sundry denials of strange 190 Montaigne and Shakespeare.
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常見字詞
APOLOGY argument Bacon Baconians Ben Jonson Bruno's Cæsar Cicero cited classics Claudio coincidence Collins's comedy CORIOLANUS critic culture death discourse doth drama dramatist echo edition Elizabethan English Euripides expression fact faculty Faerie Queene Farmer Fleay Florio Florio's translation further Greek HAMLET hand hath idea influence Jonson JULIUS CÆSAR king LEAR learning less lines literary Love's LABOUR'S LOST LUCRECE MACBETH Marston matter MEASURE FOR MEASURE mind Montaigne Montaigne's essay nature original OTHELLO Ovid parallels passage philosophic phrase plays Plutarch poet poet's Professor Baynes Professor Collins Professor Fiske proposition published Quarto question reason recognised scene seems Seneca sentence Shake Shakespeare soliloquy Sonnets soul speare speare's speech spirit suggested suppose surmise theme thesis things thou thought tion TITUS TITUS ANDRONICUS trace tragedies TROILUS TROILUS AND CRESSIDA unto VENUS AND ADONIS verbal verse writes