Thoughts from the GreeksUniversity of Missouri Press, 1969 - 166 psl. |
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88 psl.
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra and placing it in the last sec- tion ( Tragedies ) of the First Folio . For Ernest Schanzer , it was a ' problem ' play , like Julius Caesar and Measure for Measure , presenting a radical moral ...
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra and placing it in the last sec- tion ( Tragedies ) of the First Folio . For Ernest Schanzer , it was a ' problem ' play , like Julius Caesar and Measure for Measure , presenting a radical moral ...
342 psl.
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra . Oxford Shakespeare Concordances . Oxford : Clarendon P ; New York : Oxford UP , 1972. 351 pp . This is a concordance to text of First Folio . 1249 Mitchell , Dennis S. " Shakespeare's Antony and ...
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra . Oxford Shakespeare Concordances . Oxford : Clarendon P ; New York : Oxford UP , 1972. 351 pp . This is a concordance to text of First Folio . 1249 Mitchell , Dennis S. " Shakespeare's Antony and ...
426 psl.
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra (Quarterly Review, April 1906), 350. 9. Janet Adelman, The Common Liar (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1973), 170. Adelman, Common Liar, 219. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Shakespeare, Ben ...
... The Tragedie of Antony and Cleopatra (Quarterly Review, April 1906), 350. 9. Janet Adelman, The Common Liar (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1973), 170. Adelman, Common Liar, 219. Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Shakespeare, Ben ...
Turinys
The Futility of Unyielding Anger | 1 |
The Effects of Voluntary Acts Are Inescapable | 7 |
The Importance of Thinking Rightly | 14 |
Autorių teisės | |
Nerodoma skirsnių: 15
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
Achilles actions and feelings Aeschylus Agamemnon angry appear Aristotle arrogance Athenians Athens attitude beauty become believed body bring buried Callicles century B.C. Chryses citizens clearly clichés conception concerning conduct considered court Creon Crito death declaration deed Deity dialogue Diotíma discussion divine doubtless escape Euripides evil exile experience father fear friends genuine gods Gorgias Greece Greek literature Hades happened honor human hybris idea important indignation individual interpretation Iolcus Jason Jesus judges justice keep kind Know thyself knowledge laws living man's matter maxim mean meant Medea ment mind mortal nature never Oedipus one's outlook person persuade Plato Plato's Polyneices possible proper Protagoras prove purpose rational reason redemptive regarded remember role of suffering seems Socrates Sophocles soul spirit statement Teiresias Thebes Thessaly things think rightly think wrongly thought Thucydides tion treated unjustly true truth understanding unreasoning anger urges vengeance verb wisdom words wrong Zeus