Shakespeare Studies in Baconian LightJ. Howell, 1901 - 499 páginas |
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Página 93
... expression , My presence , like a robe pontifical , — it is interesting to find that Bacon , in his charge against St. John , uses much the same expression- " You take upon you a pontifical habit , and you couple your slander with a ...
... expression , My presence , like a robe pontifical , — it is interesting to find that Bacon , in his charge against St. John , uses much the same expression- " You take upon you a pontifical habit , and you couple your slander with a ...
Página 220
... expression which seem so commonplace that it is difficult to understand why they were inserted . And yet even in these we may sometimess hit upon phrases extremely characteristic of the philosopher and the poet . For instance , the Note ...
... expression which seem so commonplace that it is difficult to understand why they were inserted . And yet even in these we may sometimess hit upon phrases extremely characteristic of the philosopher and the poet . For instance , the Note ...
Página 221
... expression none is more curious than What Else ? Nos . 307 and 1,400 . For on looking into the use of this little phrase in Shakespeare we always find it means what a lively up - to - date youth would express by Why certainly ! or , Of ...
... expression none is more curious than What Else ? Nos . 307 and 1,400 . For on looking into the use of this little phrase in Shakespeare we always find it means what a lively up - to - date youth would express by Why certainly ! or , Of ...
Conteúdo
Francis Bacon | 32 |
3 Bacons Selfvindication | 47 |
I Cannot Tell | 54 |
28 outras seções não mostradas
Outras edições - Ver todos
Shakespeare Studies in Baconian Light (Classic Reprint) Robert M. Theobald Prévia não disponível - 2017 |
Termos e frases comuns
Abbott All's allusion Bacon Bacon says Bacon speaks Baconian Baconian theory behaviour better Cæs Cæsar Catullus Cicero classic sense Coriolanus Cowden Clarke critics Cymb delated deprave derived doth dramatic Edward II English evidence expression fancy following passage fortune garment give Hamlet hath heart Henry Henry VI honour hope idea instance Julius Cæsar King Latin word Lear learned Lord Love's Labour's Lost Lucrece Macb Macbeth madness Marlowe Marlowe's meaning Meas mind nature never Novum Organum Ovid passages in Shakespeare passion Perkin Warbeck phrase Plato play poems poet poetry Prince Promus note prose quoted reason reference remarkable Rich Richard III sentiment Shake Shakespeare Shakspere shews slyness Sonnet speare specimens speech spirit sweet Tamburlaine thee things thou thought Timon tion true truth Twelfth Night Ulysses verb VIII Winter's Tale wonder writes