Literary Criticism: Pope to CroceGay Wilson Allen, Harry Hayden Clark American Book Company, 1941 - 659 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 82
Sivu 34
... perhaps any other has produced , and particularized most of those rational and manly beauties which give a value to that divine work . I shall next Saturday enter upon an essay On the Pleasures of the Imagination , which , though it ...
... perhaps any other has produced , and particularized most of those rational and manly beauties which give a value to that divine work . I shall next Saturday enter upon an essay On the Pleasures of the Imagination , which , though it ...
Sivu 71
... perhaps no poet ever kept his person- ages more distinct from each other . I will not say with Pope that every speech may be assigned to the proper speaker , be- cause many speeches there are which have nothing characteris- tical ; but ...
... perhaps no poet ever kept his person- ages more distinct from each other . I will not say with Pope that every speech may be assigned to the proper speaker , be- cause many speeches there are which have nothing characteris- tical ; but ...
Sivu 247
... perhaps more difficult there than elsewhere . Dissimulation is easiest in mere conversation ; indeed , though it may sound paradoxical , it is really more difficult even in a letter . For in the case of a letter the writer is alone ...
... perhaps more difficult there than elsewhere . Dissimulation is easiest in mere conversation ; indeed , though it may sound paradoxical , it is really more difficult even in a letter . For in the case of a letter the writer is alone ...
Sisältö
ALEXANDER POPE | 1 |
JOSEPH ADDISON | 24 |
FRANÇOIS MARIE AROUET DE VOLTAIRE | 35 |
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action admirable Aeschylus aesthetic Alexander Pope ancient appears artist beauty BIBLIOGRAPHY TEXT century character Charles Lamb classical Claude Bernard Coleridge comedy comic common divine drama Edgar Allan Poe English epic essay Euripides expression eyes fact fancy feeling fiction French Friedrich Schlegel genius give Goethe Greek Homer human idea ideal Iliad imagination imitation intellect judge judgment language laws less Literary Criticism literature living London lyric Madame de Staël manner matter means mind modern Modern Language Association Molière moral nation nature never novel novelist object observation painting Paris passion person philosophy pleasure poem poet poetic poetry Preface principle produced prose reader reason romantic romanticism rules Sainte-Beuve Schiller sense sentiments Shakespeare soul speak spirit taste theory things thought tion tragedy translation true truth University verse vols Voltaire Walter Pater whole words writing York