The Harvard Classics, Volume 32Charles William Eliot P. F. Collier & son, 1910 |
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Page 117
... reality , it is more difficult and also more hazardous to be just towards them and to assign to each its share of action . The principle which guided him in his administration was to look only at the fact , at the result , and to grant ...
... reality , it is more difficult and also more hazardous to be just towards them and to assign to each its share of action . The principle which guided him in his administration was to look only at the fact , at the result , and to grant ...
Page 149
... reality Celtic . Imaginative power is nearly always proportionate to concentration of feeling , and lack of the ... realities , and in pursuing its splendid visions . The essential element in the Celt's poetic life is the adventure ...
... reality Celtic . Imaginative power is nearly always proportionate to concentration of feeling , and lack of the ... realities , and in pursuing its splendid visions . The essential element in the Celt's poetic life is the adventure ...
Page 162
... reality than Arthur . Neither Gildas nor Aneurin , his contemporaries , speak of him ; Bede did not even know his name ; Taliessin and Liwarc'h Hên gave him only a secondary place . In Nennius , on the 11 Since the first publication of ...
... reality than Arthur . Neither Gildas nor Aneurin , his contemporaries , speak of him ; Bede did not even know his name ; Taliessin and Liwarc'h Hên gave him only a secondary place . In Nennius , on the 11 Since the first publication of ...
Page 163
... reality lies hidden , history offers us no means of attaining it . It cannot be doubted that the discovery of Arthur's tomb in the Isle of Avalon in 1189 was an invention of Norman policy , just as in 1283 , the very year in which ...
... reality lies hidden , history offers us no means of attaining it . It cannot be doubted that the discovery of Arthur's tomb in the Isle of Avalon in 1189 was an invention of Norman policy , just as in 1283 , the very year in which ...
Page 170
... reality of Cymric origin . And first of all , M. de la Villemarqué has demonstrated to perfection that the name of Lancelot is only a transla- 16 M. de la Villemarqué makes appeal to the popular songs still extant in Brittany , in which ...
... reality of Cymric origin . And first of all , M. de la Villemarqué has demonstrated to perfection that the name of Lancelot is only a transla- 16 M. de la Villemarqué makes appeal to the popular songs still extant in Brittany , in which ...
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absolute action æsthetic appearance beauty become better Breton Brittany Byron categorical categorical imperative Celtic races Chrétien de Troyes classical conceived conception condition consequently Cymric death desire determination discourse divine doth duty effect empirical eternal existence faculty feeling force freedom genius Giraldus Cambrensis give Goethe happiness hath honour human idea ideal imagination imperative impulsion inclination individual infinite instinct judgment kingdom of ends knowledge korigans Lady Charlotte Guest liberty limits live Mabinogion matter maxim means mind Modron Molière Montaigne moral law necessary necessity never object objective laws pantheism Peredur perfect person philosophy physical Plato poetry poets possible practical principle priori pure rational reality reason regard respect Roman selfe sensuous soul speake spirit synthetic proposition taste things thou thought tion trouvères true truth understanding unity universal law unto whole words world of sense worth