The Philosophy of ShakespeareKingsport Press, Incorporated, 1937 - 596 pages |
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Page 349
... remains without measure . Noth- ing more real than that splendid transmission of the news of the capture of Troy in one night by bonfires lighted one after the other and corresponding from mountain to mountain - from Mount Ida to the ...
... remains without measure . Noth- ing more real than that splendid transmission of the news of the capture of Troy in one night by bonfires lighted one after the other and corresponding from mountain to mountain - from Mount Ida to the ...
Page 483
... remains mind . This it is that shall say the last word . The Caliph Almanzor makes the people spit on Averroes at the door of the mosque of Cordova ; the Duke of York spits in person on Milton ; a Rohan , almost a prince , - " duc ne ...
... remains mind . This it is that shall say the last word . The Caliph Almanzor makes the people spit on Averroes at the door of the mosque of Cordova ; the Duke of York spits in person on Milton ; a Rohan , almost a prince , - " duc ne ...
Page 528
... remains upon them , their thought suffers through it and releases itself only with difficulty , —we make schoolboys learn it by heart , and I who speak , when a child , was its victim . In such history there is everything except history ...
... remains upon them , their thought suffers through it and releases itself only with difficulty , —we make schoolboys learn it by heart , and I who speak , when a child , was its victim . In such history there is everything except history ...
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