WILLIAM SHAKSPEARE AS A PHYSIOLOGIST, AND PSYCHOLOGIST
Abstract
sinnerâs floweret flower.and blossoms-And thereThe I stood âTwas There The poorat the cross-roads sighing; hard on the midnight hour;waved poor in the sinnerâs moonliglmt flower.* slowlyâGiveme an ounceof civet,apothmecary,To sweeten We the ourmy imagination.â the We core hope, of our however, subject, and yet time we are atend theme.of our space.at anotherto pursueHeineâsBook of Songs.by Johmn L. Willis.Lon-don,WILLIAM CHOLOGIST.SHAKSPEARE By A. 0. [ContinuedPHYSIOLOGIST, M. D., page 148.] us deeply PortAND Hope,PSY-KELLOGG,C. W.from servedIr Lear extraordinary even thingthese,Macbeth intuitive,to impress knowledgethe yet everypsychological as they are, dramatic to measure for the to have which the he most hasof Shakspeare, above cannot of that for the leftso infinitely literature,in ancient by which they powers wonderful notions man.or modern we emanated; seems play, of, Nothing and arebe taken intellect plenof tragedyas a guage from titude Hamlet, most nius the range, ally whencethe exhibitionof the completeof these that exalted of the wonderful as this haveof all he has profound left us and subjects, powersus the ge-reverence exhibits the sofor the completelyversatility play. the No.4. Allof his powers, the deepest profounduniversality those which humanof their individumind inVOL.XVI. 410 all ages, are hereJournal grappled Wit most profound, union. the with,Insanity. and in each the