The Melancholy Muse: Chaucer, Shakespeare, and Early MedicineDuquesne University Press, 1995 - 185 Seiten Melancholy is so much part of human experience that it is no surprise that, in its clinical dimension, it has been written about by physicians for hundreds of years, from antiquity into the 20th century. |
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Seite 10
... thinking on melancholy , which included boredom and self - loathing . In The Parson's Tale , for example , Chaucer could be drawing on either medieval religious or scientific thinking when he writes , " envye and ire maken bitterness in ...
... thinking on melancholy , which included boredom and self - loathing . In The Parson's Tale , for example , Chaucer could be drawing on either medieval religious or scientific thinking when he writes , " envye and ire maken bitterness in ...
Seite 23
... thinking on melancholia is A Treatise of Melancholie ( 1586 ) , a work which gives more attention than Elyot's to the moral dimen- sion of the disease . Written by Timothy Bright ( 1550 ? - 1615 ) , a physician who later became a ...
... thinking on melancholia is A Treatise of Melancholie ( 1586 ) , a work which gives more attention than Elyot's to the moral dimen- sion of the disease . Written by Timothy Bright ( 1550 ? - 1615 ) , a physician who later became a ...
Seite 69
... thinking to be explained completely by root cultural conditions giving rise to parallel mani- festations in medicine and poetry . The appearance of the word hereos in Chaucer's de- scription of Arcite's love for Emelye in " The Knight's ...
... thinking to be explained completely by root cultural conditions giving rise to parallel mani- festations in medicine and poetry . The appearance of the word hereos in Chaucer's de- scription of Arcite's love for Emelye in " The Knight's ...
Inhalt
FOUR As You Like | 90 |
Notes | 153 |
Bibliography | 169 |
Urheberrecht | |
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acedia affected Ages amor hereos Anatomy of Melancholy appears Arabic authorities Avicenna become Bernard blood body Book brain Bright called cause century chapter character Chaucer choly cited considered courtly love Criseyde cure death desire discussion disease dream Duchess early Edited Elizabethan English fear give Hamlet hereos human humours ideas imagination influence Italy Jaques Jaques's John kind knight knowledge known later Latin Laurens Liber literary London lover lovesickness madness mania means medicine medieval melan melancholy mental Merton College Middle Ages mind nature never Notes observes passage passion patient persons physicians play poem poetry poets reason reference Renaissance sadness says scene seems Shakespeare sleep speaks spirit suffering suggests symptoms things thinking thought tion translated treatises treatment Troilus understanding University Press writing York