The Proper Study: Essays on Western Classics |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 77
Page 22
... soul . The soul that awakes then , to live for an instant only and be lost almost at once in force's vast kingdom , awakes pure and whole ; it contains no ambiguities , nothing complicated or turbid ; it has no room for anything but ...
... soul . The soul that awakes then , to live for an instant only and be lost almost at once in force's vast kingdom , awakes pure and whole ; it contains no ambiguities , nothing complicated or turbid ; it has no room for anything but ...
Page 27
... soul , the extent to which each soul creates its own destiny , the question of what elements in the soul are transformed by merciless necessity as it tailors the soul to fit the require- ments of shifting fate , and of what elements can ...
... soul , the extent to which each soul creates its own destiny , the question of what elements in the soul are transformed by merciless necessity as it tailors the soul to fit the require- ments of shifting fate , and of what elements can ...
Page 170
... soul of Socrates . In the Phaedo philosophy is the practice of dying ; in the Sympo- sion and Phaedrus it is the eroticism of the soul for the Idea which creates the procreative community among men . Eros dominates his life because it ...
... soul of Socrates . In the Phaedo philosophy is the practice of dying ; in the Sympo- sion and Phaedrus it is the eroticism of the soul for the Idea which creates the procreative community among men . Eros dominates his life because it ...
Contents
HOMER The Iliad or The Poem of Force | 3 |
AESCHYLUS Introduction to the Oresteia | 51 |
Sophocles | 78 |
Copyright | |
20 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
The Proper Study: Essays on Western Classics Quentin Anderson,Joseph Anthony Mazzeo No preview available - 1962 |
Common terms and phrases
action Admetus Aegisthus Aeneas Aeneid Aeschylus Agamemnon Ajax Alceste Alceste's Antigone appears Aristophanes Aristotle Athens becomes Célimène character chorus Christian Claudius Clytaemestra comedy comic conscious crime criticism Dante death Dido divine Don Quixote drama dream emotions epic essay Euripides evil expression fact fear feeling force Freud genius Goethe Goethe's Greek Hamlet Heracles hero Homer human idea ideal Iliad imagination kind king Kômos Laertes legend live lyric Machiavelli Marcus Aurelius means Melville mind Moby-Dick Molière Montaigne moral murder nature never object Odysseus Oedipus Orestes passion perhaps philosopher pity Plato play poem poet poetic poetry political Raskolnikov reader reality reason ritual scene seems sense Shakespeare Socrates Sophocles soul spirit Stendhal story symbolic things thou thought Thucydides tion tradition tragedy tragic Trojans Troy true truth Vergil vision whole words Wordsworth write