Criticism: The Major TextsWalter Jackson Bate Harcourt, Brace, 1952 - 610 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 82
Sivu 291
... experience and good sense , and as such are automatically felt in the actual process of creating or responding to art . What is needed , then , is the ability to absorb knowledge and experience , and the ability to apply them ...
... experience and good sense , and as such are automatically felt in the actual process of creating or responding to art . What is needed , then , is the ability to absorb knowledge and experience , and the ability to apply them ...
Sivu 442
... experience treated in the various forms of poetry — the drama , the lyric , philosophical verse , the epic , satire is a concrete indication . Poetry can thus include the results , the intellectual insights and conclusions , of science ...
... experience treated in the various forms of poetry — the drama , the lyric , philosophical verse , the epic , satire is a concrete indication . Poetry can thus include the results , the intellectual insights and conclusions , of science ...
Sivu 577
... experience ; by suggestion from other people ; and by our own intellectual elabo- ration . Suggestion and elaboration have their evident dangers , but are indispensable means of increasing our range of ideas . It is necessary in ...
... experience ; by suggestion from other people ; and by our own intellectual elabo- ration . Suggestion and elaboration have their evident dangers , but are indispensable means of increasing our range of ideas . It is necessary in ...
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action admiration ancient appear Aristotle artist beauty believe Ben Jonson blank verse century character Chaucer classical Coleridge comedy common criticism delight distinction drama Dryden effect Eliot emotion English epic Epic poetry essay Euripides example excellent expression feeling genius give Goethe Greek hath Hazlitt Homer human I. A. Richards ideal ideas Iliad images imagination imitation Irving Babbitt Johnson kind knowledge language learning less literary literature living Matthew Arnold means ment mind modern moral nature neoclassic neoclassicism never object particular passion perfect perhaps persons philosopher Plato play pleasure poem Poesy poet poetic poetry Pope present principles produced prose reader reason rhyme romantic romanticism rules Sainte-Beuve scenes sense sentiments Shakespeare Sophocles soul speak style sublime T. S. Eliot taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth ture unity verse whole words Wordsworth writing