Shakespeare and Stoic Ethics, Band 2University of Wisconsin, 1965 - 886 Seiten |
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Seite 383
... Prince considers the question , " to be or not to be , " we may think , even as he does , that he is irresolute , whereas in fact he is at- tempting to sort things out according to the dictates of his conscience . Just as he continually ...
... Prince considers the question , " to be or not to be , " we may think , even as he does , that he is irresolute , whereas in fact he is at- tempting to sort things out according to the dictates of his conscience . Just as he continually ...
Seite 403
... Prince makes it clear that he sees the stakes of this contest to be noth- ing less than his free will : Why , look you now , how unworthy a thing you make of me ! You would play upon me , you would seem to know my stops ; you would ...
... Prince makes it clear that he sees the stakes of this contest to be noth- ing less than his free will : Why , look you now , how unworthy a thing you make of me ! You would play upon me , you would seem to know my stops ; you would ...
Seite 438
... Prince : An Elizabethan Translation , ed . and intro . Hardin Craig . Chapel Hill , 1944 . The Prince and Other Works , trans . and intro . Allan H. Gilbert . Chicago , 1941 . Mandell , Clarence W. Our Seneca . New Haven , 1941 . Meyer ...
... Prince : An Elizabethan Translation , ed . and intro . Hardin Craig . Chapel Hill , 1944 . The Prince and Other Works , trans . and intro . Allan H. Gilbert . Chicago , 1941 . Mandell , Clarence W. Our Seneca . New Haven , 1941 . Meyer ...
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
action Antony appearance and reality assassination attitude audience augury aware behavior Caius Ligarius Cardan Cassius characters Cicero comes concerned conscience consciousness conspirators constancy course death Decius Brutus delay Denmark difference divine doth duty Elizabethan Epictetus evil eyes fact Fate father fear feel Fortune Fortune's freedom Gertrude Gertrude and Claudius Gertrude's Ghost Ghost's command gods grief Hamlet says hath heaven hero honor Horatio human intro judgment Julius Caesar killing Claudius King Hamlet Laertes Levin lines Machiavellian man's Marcellus mind moral motives Mousetrap murder nature Ophelia passion philosophical play Player King Plutarch Polonius Portia Priam Prince problem Providence Pyrrhus reason revenge revenge play Roman scourge and minister seems Senecan sense serpent's egg Shakespeare shows of love soliloquy soul speaks speech spirit Stoic ethics Stoicism suicide supernatural thee theme things thou thought throne tion tragedy trans truth universe vengeance words