| Artur Rojszczak, Jacek Cachro, Gabriel Kurczewski - 2003 - 420 页
...PERSISTENT DIFFICULTY OF DISJUNCTION WIM VELDMAN Katholieke Un}veraiteit Nijmegen, the Netherlands Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart, or in the head? — Shakespeare, Merchant of Venice, III.ii.64 1. INTUITIONISTIC ANALYSIS We want to show, in this... | |
| A. G. Harmon - 2004 - 212 页
...to sing a song that associates "fancy"—the bait to which the will often succumbs—with appetite. Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart, or in the head? How begot, how nourished? Reply, reply. It is engender W in the eyes, With gazing fed; and fancy dies In the cradle... | |
| Ross W. Duffin - 2004 - 536 页
...TeU ^Me, Where Is fancy Reply, reply. A Song the whilst Bassanio comments on the Caskets to himself. Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart, or in the head, How begot, how nourished? It is engend'red in the eye, With gazing fed, and Fancy dies: In the cradle where it lies... | |
| Malcolm A. Jeeves - 2004 - 270 页
...ventricular theory). Thus he has Portia reflect on the alternatives in The Merchant of Venice when she sings: "Tell me where is fancy bred, / Or in the heart or in the head?" Sir John Falstaff, in Henry IV, echoes these choices in attributing the king's apoplexy to "a kind... | |
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