| Colin Nicholson - 1994 - 252 pàgines
...are central to the poem's design and it will touch wrathful melodrama at any attempted infringement: All this dread ORDER break - for whom? for thee? Vile worm! - oh Madness, Pride, Impiety! (I, 257-8) But the 'Design' prefixed after 1 743 states a concern with the... | |
| Edgar Allan Poe - 2000 - 678 pàgines
...being wreck'd, and world on world; Heav'n's whole foundations to their centre nod, And Nature tremble to the throne of God! All this dread order break — for whom? for thee? Vile worm! — O madness! pride! impiety! 158 Note 15: Seneca's account of the new island is in Questiones naturales,... | |
| Susan Neiman - 2008 - 490 pàgines
...unidentified Voltaire quotes in this chapter. The full text of Pope's reference comes from his Essay on Man: "All this dread ORDER break — for whom? For thee? Vile worm! Oh madness! Pride! Impiety!" Kant's discussion of the purity of Jewish monotheism occurs in his Critique... | |
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