| Philip Sidney - 1983 - 580 sider
...coming towards me with a sullen gravity, as though they could not abide vice by daylight, rudely clothed for to witness outwardly their contempt of outward...any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger. These men casting largesse as they go of definitions, divisions, and distinctions, with a scornful... | |
| Jan Adrianus van Dorsten, Dominic Baker-Smith, Arthur F. Kinney - 1986 - 268 sider
...coming towards me with a sullen gravity, as though they could not abide vice by daylight, rudely clothed for to witness outwardly their contempt of outward...any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger' (p. 29). Both are images of the mind, ideas, as well as types and characters. They are, Sidney implies,... | |
| Robert E. Stillman - 1986 - 292 sider
...clothing worn "to witness outwardly their contempt of outward things," and their duplicity in being "angry with any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger," it is mainly of the Stoics that he appears to be thinking." At the same time Sidney was just as capable... | |
| Emily W. Sunstein - 1991 - 514 sider
...through since Clara and William died. She felt that she had grown; her literary ambition was stronger: "With books in their hands against glory, / whereto they set their names — " she quoted Sir Philip Sidney in her journal.9 Her major heroine in Valperga, Euthanasia — Greek... | |
| Alan Hager - 1991 - 236 sider
...the raw material of experience because it welcomes, as in the case of his moral philosophers—"angry with any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger" (83)—simplism and hypocrisy. Behind that satiric mask, however, lies a truth that informs all Sidney's... | |
| Peter C. Herman - 1996 - 294 sider
..."coming towards me with a sullen gravity, as though they could not abide vice by daylight, rudely clothed for to witness outwardly their contempt of outward...their names, sophistically speaking against subtlety" (23-24). The divergences between these texts can be partially (but only partially) resolved through... | |
| Peter Elmer, Nick Webb, Roberta Wood, Nicholas Webb - 2000 - 428 sider
...coming towards me with a sullen gravity, as though they could not abide vice by daylight, rudely clothed for to witness outwardly their contempt of outward...any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger. These men casting largesse as they go of definitions, divisions, and distinctions, with a scornful... | |
| David Ian Galbraith - 2000 - 260 sider
...The Praise of Folly. Each is associated with the attributes of his calling: the moral philosophers 'with books in their hands against glory, whereto...names, sophistically speaking against subtlety,' and the historian 'laden with old mouse-eaten records, authorizing himself (for the most part) upon other... | |
| Philip Sidney - 2002 - 182 sider
...coming towards me with a sullen gravity, as though they could not abide vice by daylight, rudely clothed for to witness outwardly their contempt of outward...any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger. These men casting largesse as they go of definitions, divisions, and distinctions [processes of scholastic... | |
| Philip Sidney - 2002 - 286 sider
...theit contempt of outward things, with books in theit hands against glory, whereto they set theit 40 names, sophistically speaking against subtlety, and...any man in whom they see the foul fault of anger. These men casting largesse as they go of definitions, divisions, and distinctions, with a scornful... | |
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