The Major Critics: The Development of English Literary CriticismCharles Shiveley Holmes Knopf, 1957 - 313 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 63
Sivu 59
... true which is false ; so as the other artists , and especially the historian , affirming many things , can , in the cloudy knowledge of mankind , hardly escape from many lies . But the poet ( as I said before ) never affirmeth . The ...
... true which is false ; so as the other artists , and especially the historian , affirming many things , can , in the cloudy knowledge of mankind , hardly escape from many lies . But the poet ( as I said before ) never affirmeth . The ...
Sivu 235
... true that criticism is really , in itself , a baneful and injurious employment ; is it true that all time given to writing critiques on the works of others would be much better employed if it were given to original composition , of ...
... true that criticism is really , in itself , a baneful and injurious employment ; is it true that all time given to writing critiques on the works of others would be much better employed if it were given to original composition , of ...
Sivu 260
... true . But in the order of thought , in art , the glory , the eternal honour is that charlatanism shall find no ... true and un- true or only half - true . It is charlatanism , conscious or un- conscious , whenever we confuse or ...
... true . But in the order of thought , in art , the glory , the eternal honour is that charlatanism shall find no ... true and un- true or only half - true . It is charlatanism , conscious or un- conscious , whenever we confuse or ...
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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