The New Pelican Guide to English Literature: The age of ShakespeareBoris Ford Penguin Books, 1982 - 576 páginas V.1. pt. 1. Medieval literature : Chaucer and the alliterative tradition. pt. 2. Medieval literature : the European inheritance -- v.2. The age of Shakespeare - - v.3. From Donne to Marvell -- v.4. From Dryden to Johnson -- v.5. From Blake to Byron -- v.6. From Dickens to Hardy -- v.7. From James to Elliot -- v.8. The present -- v.9. American literature. |
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Página 19
... natural and man - made laws are thus ranged in the same definition ; and a famous passage on natural law shows how closely Hooker identifies its physical and its moral aspects ( which the next century was to separate ) : Now , if nature ...
... natural and man - made laws are thus ranged in the same definition ; and a famous passage on natural law shows how closely Hooker identifies its physical and its moral aspects ( which the next century was to separate ) : Now , if nature ...
Página 91
... Nature ; while the very act of doing so ' artificially ' demonstrated the rational nature of man . It might be hazardous to press the latter argument too boldly , as Polixenes finds in The Winter's Tale ( IV . iv ) ; nevertheless ...
... Nature ; while the very act of doing so ' artificially ' demonstrated the rational nature of man . It might be hazardous to press the latter argument too boldly , as Polixenes finds in The Winter's Tale ( IV . iv ) ; nevertheless ...
Página 335
... Nature and human nature , radically opposed to the traditional conceptions , that were beginning to emerge in the cons- ciousness of the age . 11 For Edmund man is merely a part of the morally indifferent world of nature , and his ...
... Nature and human nature , radically opposed to the traditional conceptions , that were beginning to emerge in the cons- ciousness of the age . 11 For Edmund man is merely a part of the morally indifferent world of nature , and his ...
Términos y frases comunes
action appears audience called Cambridge century Chapman characters classical close comedy common contrast court critics death drama edition effect elements Elizabethan England English English Studies especially Essays example experience expression feeling figure final force give Hamlet hand hero human humour imagination important interest Italy Jonson kind King language later Lear learning less lines literary literature living London means mind moral nature night notes once passion period play plot poem poet poetic poetry political popular present printing Queene reader reason relation Renaissance rhetoric romantic satire scene seems sense Shakespeare Sidney social Sonnets speech Spenser stage Studies suggests theatre theme things Thou thought tradition tragedy true turn University verse whole writing York
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Gothic Motifs in the Fiction of William Gibson Tatiani G. Rapatzikou Sin vista previa disponible - 2004 |
Anarchist Seeds Beneath the Snow: Left-libertarian Thought and British ... David Goodway Vista previa limitada - 2006 |