The Women of the Renaissance: A Study of FeminismG. P. Putnamś sons, 1901 - 510 من الصفحات Printed in Great Britain. |
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الصفحة xiv
... platonist - Hunting philosophised ; Budé and Blondo - Park animals - Nature - Life at watering- places ; pure water ; gravity and fun . Pages 228-260 CHAPTER V INTELLECTUAL RESOURCES The library - Curiosity divided and Xiv CONTENTS.
... platonist - Hunting philosophised ; Budé and Blondo - Park animals - Nature - Life at watering- places ; pure water ; gravity and fun . Pages 228-260 CHAPTER V INTELLECTUAL RESOURCES The library - Curiosity divided and Xiv CONTENTS.
الصفحة 157
... platonist spirit , as Plato understood it , was often exactly the opposite . The women and the poets whom Plato condemned , 1 the prelates who were the heads of Christendom , were its propagators . They were not greatly enamoured of ...
... platonist spirit , as Plato understood it , was often exactly the opposite . The women and the poets whom Plato condemned , 1 the prelates who were the heads of Christendom , were its propagators . They were not greatly enamoured of ...
الصفحة 164
... platonists since they extolled the religion of beauty , and woman as essentially its priestess ; and since they saw in love ... platonist spirit was so coldly received in France . Platonism was the art of rendering virtue pleasant and ...
... platonists since they extolled the religion of beauty , and woman as essentially its priestess ; and since they saw in love ... platonist spirit was so coldly received in France . Platonism was the art of rendering virtue pleasant and ...
الصفحة 173
... platonist in the sense that she proclaims the existence of two loves , a good and a bad ; but to her the distinction between them is simplicity itself : the one is man's love , the other , woman's ; men love with an evil , earthly love ...
... platonist in the sense that she proclaims the existence of two loves , a good and a bad ; but to her the distinction between them is simplicity itself : the one is man's love , the other , woman's ; men love with an evil , earthly love ...
الصفحة 181
... platonist , however , she acknowledges no degrees in honour ; there is no splitting it up ; it must be preserved in its entirety : and the primitive , strenuous , almost naïve lady concludes that chastity does not consist solely in ...
... platonist , however , she acknowledges no degrees in honour ; there is no splitting it up ; it must be preserved in its entirety : and the primitive , strenuous , almost naïve lady concludes that chastity does not consist solely in ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
admirable aesthetic Anne of Brittany Anne of France appeared ardent Aretino artistic beauty believe Bembo Bonaventure des Périers Castiglione century charm church conversation court dance daughter death delightful devoted divine duchess enthusiasm everything excellent eyes faith fashion father favour feminine French friends girl give grace hand happiness heart Heptameron honour human husband idea ideal intellectual Isabella d'Este Italian Italy king ladies letters live Louis XII Louise of Savoy lover Madame Margaret of France marriage married matter Michelangelo mind monk Montaigne moral mother mysticism natural never Nifo noble passion perfect Petrarch Phausina philosophic platonism platonist pleasure poet poetry portrait prelates princess pure queen regard religion Renaissance Renée of France Roman Rome seemed sentiment smile sort soul speak spirit sweet taste tender things thought truth Urbino verses virtue Vittoria Colonna wife woman women words writing young
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 63 - She riseth also while it is yet night, And giveth meat to her household, And a portion to her maidens.
الصفحة 157 - But those who see the absolute and eternal and immutable may be said to know, and not to have opinion only? Neither can that be denied. The one love and embrace the subjects of knowledge, the other those of opinion? The latter are the same, as I dare say you will...
الصفحة 354 - Wherefore I perceive that there is nothing better, than that a man should rejoice in his own works; for that is his portion: for who shall bring him to see what shall be after him?
الصفحة ii - ... THE RENAISSANCE A Study of Feminism. Translated by George Herbert Ely. 8°. With portrait . net, $3.50 " We have only admiration to bestow upon this most intricate and masterly analysis of the great feminine revolution of the sixteenth century. . . . There are chapters that we find ourselves wishing everybody might read ; the admirable essay, for instance, on the ' Embroidery of Life,' and that other chapter discussing the influence of Platonism.
الصفحة 354 - Thou hast wounded my heart, my sister, my spouse, thou hast wounded my heart with one of thy eyes, and with one hair of thy neck : J acknowledging himself her prisoner by love.
الصفحة 365 - Ce port et ceste grandeur Qu'on voit luire en vostre face. Ces dons il a mis en vous Pour se faire en vous cognoistre, Et vous a fait entre nous Comme un miracle apparoistre, Afin que de ce grand Roy D'une inviolable foy Vous peussiez posseder l'ame, Et que son affection Par vostre perfection Brulast d'une saincte flamme.
الصفحة vii - Bookman. THE ART OF LIFE Translated by George Herbert Ely. 8°. (By mail, $1.85) . . . . net, $1.75 There is no one to whom Buffon's phrase, Le style c'cst I'hommt mime, may be more justly applied than to M. de Maulde. His work is absolutely himself ; it derives from his original personality and his wide and sure learning an historical value and a literary charm almost unique. He is a wit with the curiosity and patience of the scholar, and a scholar with the temperament of the artist. The sparkle...
الصفحة ii - Everything is so brightly, so captivatingly important in this volume, the search into the past has been so well rewarded, the conclusions are so shrewd and clever, the subject is so limitless, yet curiously limited, that as history or as psychology it should gain a large public.
الصفحة 28 - That was a favourite ago with the husbands ; though, according to the best judges, fifteen was the age when the physical charms were at their best, and the soul was most malleable — a view dating as far back as Hesiod and Aristotle. . . . " In vain did the French physicians implore the men in mercy to have a little patience, beseech them to wait at least until the fourteenth year : they demurred, for it was humiliating for a father to have a fifteen-yearold daughter on his hands : at sixteen they...
الصفحة 21 - And in like maner nowe lately in our dayes Hath other Poetes attempted the same wayes: As the moste famous Baptist Mantuan The best of that sort since Poetes first began.