The Major Critics: The Development of English Literary CriticismCharles Shiveley Holmes Knopf, 1957 - 313 sivua |
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Sivu 52
... beauty of such a virtue . For these third be they which most properly do imitate to teach and delight , and to imitate borrow nothing of what is , hath been , or shall be ; but range , only reined with learned discretion , into the ...
... beauty of such a virtue . For these third be they which most properly do imitate to teach and delight , and to imitate borrow nothing of what is , hath been , or shall be ; but range , only reined with learned discretion , into the ...
Sivu 60
... beauty to be a beastly fault ( although it be very hard , since only man , and no beast , hath that gift to discern beauty ) ; grant that lovely name of Love to deserve all hateful reproaches ( although even some of my masters the ...
... beauty to be a beastly fault ( although it be very hard , since only man , and no beast , hath that gift to discern beauty ) ; grant that lovely name of Love to deserve all hateful reproaches ( although even some of my masters the ...
Sivu 111
... beauty in them , are rather to be related than presented to the eye . Examples of all these kinds are frequent , not only among all the Ancients , but in the best received of our English poets . . · • “ But I find I have been too long ...
... beauty in them , are rather to be related than presented to the eye . Examples of all these kinds are frequent , not only among all the Ancients , but in the best received of our English poets . . · • “ But I find I have been too long ...
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action Ancients Aristotle artistic beauty Ben Jonson Besant blank verse character Charles Adderley cism Coleridge Comedy composition creative Crites criticism delight Donne doth drama Dryden emotion English Epic Epic poetry Eugenius Euripides excellent expression feelings fiction French French Revolution genius Goethe Gorboduc hath Homer honour human ideas imagination imitation incidents Jonson judge judgment kind knowledge language learning Lisideius literary literature living Lycidas mean ment metaphysical metaphysical poets metre mind moral nature never novel object observed Paradise Lost passions perfection perhaps persons philosopher play pleasure plot poem Poesy poet poet's poetic poetry Polygnotus Pope practical praise produced prose reader reason rhyme rules sense Shakespeare Silent Woman Sophocles speak stage style T. S. Eliot taste things thought tion Tragedy true truth unity verse whole words Wordsworth writ write