| Agnes Heller - 2002 - 390 páginas
...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... | |
| Verna V. Gehring - 2003 - 152 páginas
...creating nature." She complains there is "art" in their "piedness," or variegation. Polixenes replies: "Say there be; Yet nature is made better by no mean...over that art Which you say adds to nature, is an art That nature makes.... This is an art Which does mend nature—change it rather; but The art itself... | |
| Gerrit Lansing - 2003 - 182 páginas
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| Rebecca W. Bushnell - 2003 - 220 páginas
...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... | |
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