Shakespeare and Stoic Ethics, Volume 1University of Wisconsin, 1965 - 886 pages |
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Page 68
... Fate and Fortune merge , and he ,, 31 speaks of " the cruelty of Fate , just as he does of " all 1,32 the attempts and all the assaults of Fortune . If there is a distinction between Fate and Fortune , it is that the former represents ...
... Fate and Fortune merge , and he ,, 31 speaks of " the cruelty of Fate , just as he does of " all 1,32 the attempts and all the assaults of Fortune . If there is a distinction between Fate and Fortune , it is that the former represents ...
Page 69
... Fate . It is a great consolation that it is together with But immediately the universe we are swept along 11 • · · thereafter , he speaks of " whatever it is that has or- dained us to live , so to die , " suggesting that Fate is no more ...
... Fate . It is a great consolation that it is together with But immediately the universe we are swept along 11 • · · thereafter , he speaks of " whatever it is that has or- dained us to live , so to die , " suggesting that Fate is no more ...
Page 193
... Fate , and Fate is effective only when man is not vigor- ous in pursuit of his ambitions . But so Helena is , for she has been granted few advantages and privileges ; hopes rest entirely upon her ingenuity . her In the entirely ...
... Fate , and Fate is effective only when man is not vigor- ous in pursuit of his ambitions . But so Helena is , for she has been granted few advantages and privileges ; hopes rest entirely upon her ingenuity . her In the entirely ...
Contents
GREEK STOICISM | 29 |
ROMAN STOICISM | 53 |
STOICISM IN THE RENAISSANCE | 99 |
3 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
according action appearance and reality appetites Aristotle Boethius Brutus Cardan Cassius Christian Cicero cism concerned conscience Consolation to Helvia Cornwallis Craig death Diogenes Laertius Divine Providence doctrines doth drama Elizabethan Elizabethan Tragedy Epictetus epistemology Essays evil expedient Fate fear Fortune Fortune's freedom gods Greek Guillaume du Vair Hamlet hath Heaven vpon Earth human ideas indifferent individual intro Julius Caesar Justus Lipsius king Library New York Loeb Classical Library logic Machiavel Machiavelli Marcus Aurelius means Meditations mercy mind monism Montaigne moral passions philosophy play Plutarch political positive Praz precepts Prince principle problem prudenzia question rational reason reference Renaissance Roman Stoicism Roman Stoics Rudolf Kirk Seneca sense Shakespeare Shakespearian soul stage Stoi Stoic ethics Stoic influence Stoic thought Stoicism Stoicism of Seneca T. S. Eliot teleological things thou tion tradition Tranquillity trans translation true truth understanding universe Vair vertue virtú virtue Zeno