Shakespeare Criticism: A SelectionDavid Nichol Smith Oxford University Press, 1968 - Počet stran: 371 |
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Strana 164
... seem unnecessary for him to acquire any other virtue . Hence , perhaps , his continued debaucheries and dissipations of every kind . — He seems , by nature , to have had a mind free or malice or any evil principle ; but he never took ...
... seem unnecessary for him to acquire any other virtue . Hence , perhaps , his continued debaucheries and dissipations of every kind . — He seems , by nature , to have had a mind free or malice or any evil principle ; but he never took ...
Strana 204
... seems real and is exclusively attended to , the crime is compara- tively nothing . But when we see these things repre- sented , the acts which they do are comparatively every thing , their impulses nothing . The state of sublime tion ...
... seems real and is exclusively attended to , the crime is compara- tively nothing . But when we see these things repre- sented , the acts which they do are comparatively every thing , their impulses nothing . The state of sublime tion ...
Strana 365
... seems to me a heedless notion , our common one , that he sat like a bird on the bough ; and sang forth , free and off hand , never knowing the troubles of other men . Not so ; with no man is it so . How could a man travel forward from ...
... seems to me a heedless notion , our common one , that he sat like a bird on the bough ; and sang forth , free and off hand , never knowing the troubles of other men . Not so ; with no man is it so . How could a man travel forward from ...
Obsah
JOHN HEMINGE d 1630 | 1 |
JOHN MILTON 160874 | 7 |
MARGARET CAVENDISH DUCHESS OF Newcastle 162474 | 15 |
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