The Philosophy of ShakespeareKingsport Press, Incorporated, 1937 - 596 pages |
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Page 317
... progress . From Phidias to Rembrandt there is onward movement , but not progress . The frescoes of the Sistine Chapel are absolutely nothing to the metopes of the Parthenon . Retrace your steps as much as you like , from the palace of ...
... progress . From Phidias to Rembrandt there is onward movement , but not progress . The frescoes of the Sistine Chapel are absolutely nothing to the metopes of the Parthenon . Retrace your steps as much as you like , from the palace of ...
Page 449
... Progress de- molishes with the left hand ; it is with the right hand that it builds . The left hand of Progress is called Force ; the right hand is called Mind . There is at this hour a great deal of useful destruction accomplished ...
... Progress de- molishes with the left hand ; it is with the right hand that it builds . The left hand of Progress is called Force ; the right hand is called Mind . There is at this hour a great deal of useful destruction accomplished ...
Page 528
... progress ; some king or other is one of the stages along the historical road ; the true stages , the stages of great ... progress engenders progress . That Philip IV . comes after Philip III . , and Charles II . after Philip IV . , it ...
... progress ; some king or other is one of the stages along the historical road ; the true stages , the stages of great ... progress engenders progress . That Philip IV . comes after Philip III . , and Charles II . after Philip IV . , it ...
Contents
PART II | 375 |
ZOILUS AS ETERNAL AS HOMER | 417 |
CRITICISM | 435 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
ancient Aristophanes beauty blood brain breath Brutus Cæsar called century Cervantes CHAPTER character cloud conscience crime crown Dante darkness death divine doth drama dream earth England Eschylus everything evil eyes father fear fire friends genius give glory gold grace Greek Hamlet hath heart heaven Henry Homer honor Iliad imagination infinite intellectual John John Shakespeare Juliet Julius Cæsar Jupiter Juvenal king King Lear laugh Lear light live look Lord Lucretius Macbeth mind Molière mysterious nature never night Othello passion philosophy Plautus play poem poet poetry prince Prometheus Rabelais Richard III Romeo seems shadow Shake soul speak speare spirit strange Stratford sweet Tacitus tears theatre thee Thespis things thou thought thousand Timon of Athens tion tongue tragedy true truth Victor Hugo virtue Voltaire William Shakespeare woman wonderful words write