| David Pepper, Frank Webster, George Revill - 2003 - 612 pagina’s
...like as a man's disposition is never well known till he be crossed, nor Proteus ever changed shape till he was straitened and held fast, so Nature exhibits...more clearly under the trials and vexations of art (mechanical devices) than when left to herself." The contrast between Bacon's attitude towards nature... | |
| Lynn Thorndike - 2003 - 708 pagina’s
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| Francis Bacon - 2003 - 488 pagina’s
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| John Llewelyn - 2004 - 216 pagina’s
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| Alexandra Lembert, Alexandra Lembert-Heidenreich - 2004 - 278 pagina’s
...will. Another representative, Francis Bacon, propagated a violent and merciless treatment of nature: For like as a man's disposition is never well known...held fast, so nature exhibits herself more clearly 181 Ted Hughes' poem Cave Birds: An Alchemical Drama (1978) is the story of a protagonist who, like... | |
| Eric H. Ash - 2004 - 288 pagina’s
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