As when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man, that it doth draw All his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their confluctions, all to run one way, This may be truly said to be a humour. Poetaster - Página 185por Ben Jonson - 1913 - 456 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Ben Jonson - 2000 - 208 páginas
...humours were bodily fluids whose balance was believed to control temperament; by extension a humour was 'when some one peculiar quality / Doth so possess...his affects, his spirits and his powers, / In their confluctions, all to run one way' (Every Man Out of His Humour, Induction). 36 has not conversed with... | |
| Walter Göbel - 2000 - 370 páginas
...Society' Reprints (Oxford, 1920) 10: 114ff: "[...] when some one peculiar qualitie / Doth so possesse a man, that it doth draw / All his affects, his spirits, and his powers / In their confluctions, all to runne one way, / this may be truly said to be a Humour." 2 Jonson, EMOoHH, 10:... | |
| William Shakespeare - 2001 - 496 páginas
...of his Humour, the task of explaining the effect of too much of any one of the four humours: ' — when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man,...his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their confluctions, all to run one way, This may be truly said to be a humour.' — Induction; ed. Gifford,... | |
| James Bednarz - 2001 - 358 páginas
...explains in Every Man Out, thus far It may, by Metaphor, apply itself Unto the general disposition: As when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man,...his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their confluctions, all to run one way. ("AFTER THE SECOND SOUNDING," LL. 98-108) But applying the rubric... | |
| Samuel Taylor Coleridge - 2001 - 490 páginas
...the name of humors. Now thus far It may, by metaphor, apply itself Unto the general disposition : As when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man, that it doth draw All his effects, his spirits, and his powers, Tn their confluctions, all to run one way, This may be truly... | |
| Richard M. Hogg, Norman Francis Blake, Roger Lass, R. W. Burchfield - 1992 - 812 páginas
...Metaphore apply it selfe Vnto the generalI disposition, As when some one peculiar quality Doth so possesse a man, that it doth draw All his affects, his spirits, and his powers In their connections all to runne one way, This may be truely sayd to be a 1 lumor. As Jonson mentions, the... | |
| Gail Kern Paster - 2010 - 291 páginas
...disposition is not a liquid itself but is rather the result, Jonson says, of a "peculiar" quality's power to draw All his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their conductions, all to run one way. (106-8) But even though disposition may not literally be liquid, Jonson does conceptualize affects,... | |
| Gerd-Günther Grau - 2004 - 190 páginas
...Dramatiker, Zeitgenossen Shakespeares, Ben Jonson: „As when some peculiar quality doth so posess a Man, that it doth draw all his affects, his spirits and his power in their construction, all to run one way, this may be truly said to be a humour."256 Die Wortgeschichte... | |
| Lothar Fietz - 2005 - 260 páginas
...human incompleteness. This view continues in modified form in Fielding's theory of comic epic: ... when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man,...his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their confluctions, all to run one way, This may be truly said to be a humour. " Shakespeare, the mature... | |
| Kenneth S. Jackson - 2005 - 324 páginas
...the name of humours. Now thus far It may, by metaphor, apply itself Unto the general disposition: As when some one peculiar quality Doth so possess a man...his affects, his spirits, and his powers, In their confluctions, all to run one way; This may be truly said to be a humour. But that a rook, in wearing... | |
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