O, there be players that I have seen play, and heard others praise, and that highly, not to speak it profanely, that, neither having the accent of Christians nor the gait of Christian, pagan, nor man, have so strutted and bellowed that I have thought... The Edinburgh Review - Página 371845Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Henry Frank - 1908 - 280 páginas
...unfortunately parented that they come into the world much as Hamlet's inauspicious players, as though " some of Nature's journeymen had made them, and not made them well, they imitated humanity so abominably." The only wonder is that there is not a vaster number of human... | |
| Dudley Kidd - 1908 - 312 páginas
...the dust at their feet. that nature had made them gentlemen, one can only imagine, with Hamlet, that some of nature's journeymen had made them and not made them well, they imitate humanity so abominably. The civilised Kafir is taken at his face value, and this by his... | |
| 1913 - 816 páginas
...demand would not justify the investment of capital in their manufacture. If made, we must suppose that "some of nature's journeymen had made" them, "and not made them well." But if the great poet may be an economist, so the really great economist must be something of a poet,... | |
| James Howe - 1994 - 290 páginas
...mirror.4 It offers a privileged perspective. Thus Hamlet judges unskillful actors to be unnatural persons ("some of nature's journeymen had made" them, "and not made them well," 3.2.33-35). The dumb show is another instance of the truth-value of transparent illusion. It tells... | |
| John M. Lynch - 2000 - 404 páginas
...discovered ; and many must be lost for ever. But what are these old types — these first-fruits of nature's vegetable germs ? Are they but rude, ill-fashioned...tree-ferns. In this old flora are grand but strange foims, so unlike all living nature, that our best botanists know not in what order of the vegetable... | |
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