Literature Criticism from 1400 to 1800: Excerpts from Criticism of the Works of Fifteenth, Sixteenth, Seventeenth, and Eighteenth-century Novelists, Poets, Playwrights, Philosophers, and Other Creative Writers, from the First Published Critical Appraisals to Current Evaluations, المجلدات 1-236Dennis Poupard Gale Research Company, 1992 - 500 من الصفحات Each print volume in this long-standing series profiles approximately 4-8 of the greatest writers and thinkers of the late Middle Ages, Renaissance and Restoration periods by providing full-text or excerpted criticism taken from books, magazines, literary reviews, newspapers and scholarly journals. Among those profiled in this volume are:
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الصفحة 108
... Learning is his greatest work ; and next to that I like the Essays ; for the Novum Organum is more laboured and less effectual than it might be . I shall give a few instances from the first of these chiefly , to ex- plain the scope of ...
... Learning is his greatest work ; and next to that I like the Essays ; for the Novum Organum is more laboured and less effectual than it might be . I shall give a few instances from the first of these chiefly , to ex- plain the scope of ...
الصفحة 113
... Learning ] : To teach men how to raise and make their for- tune is an unwonted argument , but the handling thereof concerneth learning greatly both in honor and in substance : in honor because prag- matical men may not go away with an ...
... Learning ] : To teach men how to raise and make their for- tune is an unwonted argument , but the handling thereof concerneth learning greatly both in honor and in substance : in honor because prag- matical men may not go away with an ...
الصفحة 168
... learning unclassi- fied , Bacon concludes his division of the sciences with a few remarks concerning the knowledge of man as a social animal , thereby giving what is today called the " social sci- ences " their due consideration . This ...
... learning unclassi- fied , Bacon concludes his division of the sciences with a few remarks concerning the knowledge of man as a social animal , thereby giving what is today called the " social sci- ences " their due consideration . This ...
المحتوى
Joseph Addison 16721719 | 1 |
Babur 14831530 | 83 |
Sir Francis Bacon 15611626 | 98 |
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Addison admirable appear Aristotle Atlantis Babur Baburnama beauty Bickerstaff C. S. Lewis called Canticle century character Christian comedy Conscious Lovers criticism Cross Descartes discovery divine English essay date essayist example experience expression following excerpt Francis Bacon genius give human ideas imagination induction intellectual Isaac Bickerstaff John Joseph Addison Juan kind knowledge learning less letters literary literature living Lord manner ment method mind modern Montaigne moral mystical nature never Novum Organum observation original papers passion perhaps periodical philosophy play pleasure poem poet poetry political praise prayer of quiet prose readers reason Renaissance Richard Steele Roger de Coverley says scientific seems sense sion Sir Roger soul Spectator spirit stanza Steele's style taste Tatler Teresa theory things thought tion tradition treatise true truth ture verse virtue Whig words writing written wrote