| Mary Ann McGrail - 2002 - 200 Seiten
...Shakespeare ultimately "sells out"— the famous conversation between Perdita and Polixenes on nature: Per. For I have heard it said There is an art which,...their piedness, shares With great creating nature. Pol. Say there be; Yet nature is made better by no mean But nature makes that mean: so, over that art,... | |
| Agnes Heller - 2002 - 390 Seiten
...Polyxenes in The Winter's Tale formulates Shakespeare's deepest convictions about nature. Perdita: "For I have heard it said / There is an art which...their piedness shares / With great creating nature." Polyxenes: "Say there be, /Yet nature is made better by no mean / But nature makes that mean. So over... | |
| Rebecca W. Bushnell - 2003 - 220 Seiten
...never set slips of "our carnations and streak'd gillvors, / (Which some call Nature's bastards)... For I have heard it said / There is an art which in...their piedness shares / With great creating Nature" (The Winter's Tale, 4.4.80-89). She protests that she will not plant even one of them, implicitly declaring... | |
| Wladyslaw Tatarkiewicz - 2006 - 606 Seiten
...time his form and pressure. SHAKESPEARE, The Winter's Tale, IV, 3. ART TRANSFORMS NATURE 8. PERDITA : For I have heard it said There is an art which in their piedness shares With great creating nature. POLDCENES: Say there be; Yet nature is made better by no mean But nature makes that mean: so, over... | |
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