Friendship and Literature: Spirit and Form |
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... he will have no complaints against his friend " ( 221 , 240 ) .11 Cicero also respects the reality of separate identities , but as with Aristotle , that acknowledgment does not prevent idealism ; it enables it .
... he will have no complaints against his friend " ( 221 , 240 ) .11 Cicero also respects the reality of separate identities , but as with Aristotle , that acknowledgment does not prevent idealism ; it enables it .
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But he shares with Aristotle , Cicero , and Montaigne the conviction that those who seek friendship for advantage ( in Cicero's words ) " destroy the link ... that is most productive of affection . It is not so much what we gain from ...
But he shares with Aristotle , Cicero , and Montaigne the conviction that those who seek friendship for advantage ( in Cicero's words ) " destroy the link ... that is most productive of affection . It is not so much what we gain from ...
103 ページ
Nor is it straining to suggest that by the time we get to Cicero's injunction to Atticus ( " read it , and you will recognize yourself ” [ 47 ] ) , we are meant to see this as a generalized address to all readers of the essay .
Nor is it straining to suggest that by the time we get to Cicero's injunction to Atticus ( " read it , and you will recognize yourself ” [ 47 ] ) , we are meant to see this as a generalized address to all readers of the essay .
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目次
Friendship and Form II | 11 |
Friendship as Gift Exchange | 82 |
The Merchant of Venice | 118 |
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多く使われている語句
accept actually affection Antonio argue asked Bassanio become bond Brain Cicero claims clear clearly close comes concern consider continue conventions course culture debt described earlier emotion example express fact feel formal friendship gift exchange given giving hand homosexuality human Hyde ideal important increase institutions interest intimacy issue keep kind language least less letter lines lives marriage means Merchant of Venice Miss moving never observed one's person play poems Portia precisely present principle question receive recent refers regard relationship ring risk ritual says seems seen self-interest sense sentimentality sexual Shakespeare share ship Shylock social society spirit suggests talk tells thing thought tion true turn understand usury women writing