Light from the Porch: Stoicism and English Renaissance LiteratureDidier-Erudition, 1984 - 301 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 23
Página 115
... borrows Seneca's distinction between the equable state of joy ( gaudium ) and passionate mirth , and " joy " for Cornwallis is therefore sometimes a passion to be eschewed and sometimes a felicity to be achieved . The three virtues he ...
... borrows Seneca's distinction between the equable state of joy ( gaudium ) and passionate mirth , and " joy " for Cornwallis is therefore sometimes a passion to be eschewed and sometimes a felicity to be achieved . The three virtues he ...
Página 160
... borrows from Discourses , I.xxvii.1 . He probably used a Latin translation , but the phrases are not verbatim quotations as he rewrote them to make them parallel ; it is not possible to decide whether he used Wolf or Schegk . 2 ...
... borrows from Discourses , I.xxvii.1 . He probably used a Latin translation , but the phrases are not verbatim quotations as he rewrote them to make them parallel ; it is not possible to decide whether he used Wolf or Schegk . 2 ...
Página 235
... borrows from Stoicism only what is compatible with Christianity - a patient acceptance of the will of God or Fate - and his poems and plays convey the impression that he was a man of sincere religious convictions . There is a tone of ...
... borrows from Stoicism only what is compatible with Christianity - a patient acceptance of the will of God or Fate - and his poems and plays convey the impression that he was a man of sincere religious convictions . There is a tone of ...
Contenido
Stoicism and the Renaissance Christian | 1 |
AntiStoicism | 51 |
Anthony Stafford | 109 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 3 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
Antiochus Antonio Antonio's Revenge attitude borrows Brutus Bussy D'Ambois Caesar Calvin Cambridge Cato characters Charron Christian Cicero classical Clermont constancy Constantia Cornwallis death destiny Diogenes Laertius Discourses Disp divine doctrine dramatic edition Elizabethan English Epictetus Epist Essay Essayes ethics evil fate Feliche Ford's fortitude George Chapman God's gods Hall's Hamlet happiness hath haue Heaven upon Earth honour human Ibid Jacobean John Ford John Marston King Latin Lipsius liue London man's Manuductio Marcus Aurelius Massinger Massinger's Massinissa mind Montaigne moral nature Neostoicism never opinion Oxford Pandulpho paradoxes Paris passions patience Perkin Warbeck Philip Massinger philosophical play Plutarch Poems Pompey Providentia quotations quoted reader reason Renaissance Roman Actor Samuel Daniel satire says seems Seneca Sermons Shakespeare Sophonisba soul Stafford Stoic Stoic philosophy stoical Stoicism Studies suicide things Thomas thou Tragedy translation Treatise true Tusc Vair vertue virtue virtuous vnto vols vpon wisdom wise words