The Harvard Classics, Volumen32Charles William Eliot P. F. Collier & son, 1910 |
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Página 16
... imaginations of death , yea in the most licentious times of my age . Iucundum , cum ætas florida ver agereta When my age flourishing Did spend its pleasant spring . Being amongst faire Ladies , and in earnest play , some have 19 ...
... imaginations of death , yea in the most licentious times of my age . Iucundum , cum ætas florida ver agereta When my age flourishing Did spend its pleasant spring . Being amongst faire Ladies , and in earnest play , some have 19 ...
Página 17
... imaginations at the first , and comming sodainely upon us : but doubtlesse , he that shall manage and meditate upon them with an impartiall eye , they will assuredly , in tract of time , become familiar to him : Otherwise , for my part ...
... imaginations at the first , and comming sodainely upon us : but doubtlesse , he that shall manage and meditate upon them with an impartiall eye , they will assuredly , in tract of time , become familiar to him : Otherwise , for my part ...
Página 20
... imagination , but continually in my mouth . And there is nothing I desire more to be informed of than of the death of men ; that is to say , what words , what countenance , and what face they shew at their death ; and in reading of ...
... imagination , but continually in my mouth . And there is nothing I desire more to be informed of than of the death of men ; that is to say , what words , what countenance , and what face they shew at their death ; and in reading of ...
Página 21
... imagination I amplifie these commodities by one moitie , and apprehended them much more heavie and burthensome , than I feele them when I have them upon my shoulders . The same I hope will happen to me of death . Con- sider we by the ...
... imagination I amplifie these commodities by one moitie , and apprehended them much more heavie and burthensome , than I feele them when I have them upon my shoulders . The same I hope will happen to me of death . Con- sider we by the ...
Página 29
... imaginations of him who in his youth hath tasted nothing but the paring , and seen but the superficies of true learning : whereof he hath retained but a generall and shapelesse forme : a smacke of every thing in generall , but nothing ...
... imaginations of him who in his youth hath tasted nothing but the paring , and seen but the superficies of true learning : whereof he hath retained but a generall and shapelesse forme : a smacke of every thing in generall , but nothing ...
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absolute action æsthetic appearance beauty become better Breton Brittany Byron categorical categorical imperative Celtic races Chrétien de Troyes classical conceived conception condition consequently Cymric death desire determination discourse divine doth duty effect empirical eternal existence faculty feeling force freedom genius Giraldus Cambrensis give Goethe happiness hath honour human idea ideal imagination imperative impulsion inclination individual infinite instinct judgment kingdom of ends knowledge korigans Lady Charlotte Guest liberty limits live Mabinogion matter maxim means mind Modron Molière Montaigne moral law necessary necessity never object objective laws pantheism Peredur perfect person philosophy physical Plato poetry poets possible practical principle priori pure rational reality reason regard respect Roman selfe sensuous soul speake spirit synthetic proposition taste things thou thought tion trouvères true truth understanding unity universal law unto whole words world of sense worth