| Robert Barnard - 1994 - 248 str.
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| Erica Jong - 1994 - 360 str.
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| John E. Nelson - 1994 - 472 str.
...favor of theory alone. The English poet John Dryden reflected this popular viewpoint when he wrote: Great wits are sure to madness near allied, And thin partitions do their bounds divide. We may wonder if Shakespeare was speaking from experience when he wrote in A Midsummer Night's Dream:... | |
| James Riordan - 1995 - 616 str.
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| Professor Roger Poole, Roger Poole - 1995 - 324 str.
...being baffled by his own evidence, and come to the conclusion that Dryden was right when he wrote: Great wits are sure to madness near allied, And thin partitions do their bounds divide. The judgement, in its curiously deliberate (self-imposed) insensitivity, does form a part of the larger... | |
| Natalie Angier - 1995 - 308 str.
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| Steven H. Gale - 1996 - 680 str.
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| Frederick Burwick - 1996 - 324 str.
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| Jonathan Keates - 1996 - 332 str.
...disdain for that rationality to which the contemporary ethos increasingly clung. Dryden's famous lines: Great wits are sure to madness near allied And thin partitions do their bounds divide may have achieved cliche status since they were written, but their implication for Purcell's age was... | |
| R.F Mould - 1996 - 518 str.
...Pope must have known someone like this when he penned those immortal lines in his Essay on Criticism: 'Great wits are sure to madness near allied, and thin partitions do their bounds divide'. Here indeed is a great wit. On health: 'Muddy' look could indicate changes in the writer's emotional... | |
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