Shakespeare Studies in Baconian LightS. Low, Marston & Company, Limited, 1901 - 499 páginas |
De dentro do livro
Resultados 1-5 de 40
Página xii
... tion which he did not himself supply , but left to posterity to discover . Indeed , the word Shakspere itself , so spelt , is quite arbitrary . It might be Shaxpur , or Shagspur , or any of the few score spellings which were current in ...
... tion which he did not himself supply , but left to posterity to discover . Indeed , the word Shakspere itself , so spelt , is quite arbitrary . It might be Shaxpur , or Shagspur , or any of the few score spellings which were current in ...
Página 2
... tion , resting on facts and arguments , solid and secure as mathematical demonstration . Now I do not expect many persons to change their traditional belief in this rapid fashion ; but I do think that it does not require much study or ...
... tion , resting on facts and arguments , solid and secure as mathematical demonstration . Now I do not expect many persons to change their traditional belief in this rapid fashion ; but I do think that it does not require much study or ...
Página 16
... tion , besides the poems . 4. Some traces of a great and imposing personality , who would honour any society by his presence , -some record of his ability to leave a personal impression on his con- temporaries answering to and ...
... tion , besides the poems . 4. Some traces of a great and imposing personality , who would honour any society by his presence , -some record of his ability to leave a personal impression on his con- temporaries answering to and ...
Página 21
... tion , events , interests and actions , belong to the life of princes , nobles , statesmen , men of the upper classes . If the life is rural , it is not that of peasants — the court moves into the country , and the point of view is that ...
... tion , events , interests and actions , belong to the life of princes , nobles , statesmen , men of the upper classes . If the life is rural , it is not that of peasants — the court moves into the country , and the point of view is that ...
Página 61
... tion of the Novum Organum to the king begins as follows : " Your Majesty may perhaps accuse me of larceny , having stolen from your affairs so much time as is required for this work . I cannot tell , " " non habeo quod dicam : " but ...
... tion of the Novum Organum to the king begins as follows : " Your Majesty may perhaps accuse me of larceny , having stolen from your affairs so much time as is required for this work . I cannot tell , " " non habeo quod dicam : " but ...
Conteúdo
10 | |
24 | |
32 | |
38 | |
54 | |
64 | |
80 | |
95 | |
181 | |
197 | |
212 | |
223 | |
257 | |
270 | |
279 | |
286 | |
113 | |
126 | |
154 | |
161 | |
167 | |
179 | |
318 | |
356 | |
403 | |
420 | |
489 | |
498 | |
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 speaks Bacon's philosophy Baconian Baconian theory behaviour better Cæs Cæsar Catullus Cicero classic sense Coriolanus critics Cymb Cymbeline death derived discourse doth dramatic Edward II evidence expression fancy following passage folly fortune garment give Hamlet hath heart Henry Henry VI honour hope idea instance Julius Cæsar King Latin word Lear learned look Lord Love's Labour's Lost lovers Lucrece Macb Macbeth madness Marlowe Marlowe's meaning Meas mind nature never Novum Organum occurs once Othello Ovid passion phrase pioner Plato play poems poet poetic poetry Prince Promus note prose quoted reason reference remarkable Rich Richard III scene sentiment Shake Shakespeare shews Sonnet speare specimens speech spirit strange sweet Tamburlaine tell thee things thou thought Timon tion true truth Twelfth Night Ulysses VIII Winter's Tale wonder writes