| Jacqueline Labrude Estenne - 1995 - 468 頁
...qui se livrent à la méditation solitaire donnent inévitablement libre cours à leur fantaisie : "The mind dances from scene to scene, unites all pleasures...and fortune, with all their bounty, cannot bestow" (p. 114). La folie est cet état paroxystique où la raison bascule vers son contraire. Sa nature est... | |
| Patricia Meyer Spacks - 1995 - 316 頁
...expatiates in boundless futurity, and culls from all imaginable conditions that which for the present moment he should most desire, amuses his desires with impossible...and confers upon his pride unattainable dominion. (190-91) The explanation suggests one reason why the world's abundant sources of knowledge and the... | |
| Patricia Meyer Spacks - 1995 - 310 頁
...expanates in boundless fututity, and culls from all imaginable conditions that which for the present moment he should most desire, amuses his desires with impossible enjoyments, and confers upon his pnde unattainable dominion. i190-91) The explanation suggests one reason why the worlds abundant sources... | |
| Terry Castle Professor of English Stanford University - 1995 - 294 頁
...echoing Samuel Johnson's Rasselas, wrote in his Intellectual Powers of Man (1830), that once the mind "riots in delights which nature and fortune, with all their bounty, cannot bestow," the reign of fancy is confirmed: "she grows first imperious, and in time despotic. Then fictions begin... | |
| Tim Fulford - 1996 - 274 頁
...expatiates in boundless futurity, and culls from all imaginable conditions that which for the present moment he should most desire, amuses his desires with impossible...and fortune, with all their bounty cannot bestow. (JW, vol. xv i, pp. 151-2) The resdessness of imagination, even Shakespeare's, must be checked before... | |
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