| 1893 - 1004 pages
...-Plutarch. meditation and iusanity. I was not always sure of my identity or even existence, for I have found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived." ' Schopenhauer confessed that when he composed his great work he carried himself strangely, and was... | |
| Thomson Jay Hudson - 1895 - 336 pages
...imaginative meditation and insanity. I was not always sure of my identity or even existence, for I have found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived.' Schopenhauer confessed that when he composed his great work he carried himself strangely, and was taken... | |
| Thomson Jay Hudson - 1895 - 336 pages
...imaginative meditation and insanity. I was not always sure of my identity or even existence, for I have found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived.' Schopenhauer confessed that when he composed his great work he carried himself strangely, and was taken... | |
| West London Medico-Chirurgical Society - 1896 - 160 pages
...exactly the one which the dreamy mental state assumed in the late Lord Beaconsfield, who wrote : " I was not always assured of my identity or even existence, for I sometimes found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived, and I was in the habit very often... | |
| 1917 - 410 pages
...imaginative meditation and insanity. I was not always sure of my identity, or even existence, for I have found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived.' "Schopenhauer confessed that when he composed his great work he carried himself strangely and was taken... | |
| Paul Smith - 1996 - 266 pages
...terms of his real existence: 'What am I? ... I know not what I feel — yet what I feel is madness.' 'I was not always assured of my identity, or even existence, for I sometimes found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived', says Contarini Fleming, 'and... | |
| Charles Richmond, Paul Smith - 1998 - 232 pages
...sometimes appeared to be wandering. I cannot describe the peculiar feeling I then experienced . . . but I think it was that I was not always assured of my identity, or even existence; for I sometimes found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived; and I was in the habit, very often... | |
| Amanda Anderson, Joseph Valente - 2002 - 364 pages
...dreamy states that involved sensations of lost identity. Lord Beaconsfield claimed in his memoirs: "I was not always assured of my identity or even existence, for I sometimes found it necessary to shout aloud to be sure that I lived, and I was in the habit very often... | |
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