The Poets and Their Critics: Chaucer to Collins, by H. S. DaviesHutchinson Educational, 1960 - 240 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 17
Sivu 193
... artificial life ; and with artificial life , from his infirmities , he must have been chiefly conversant : But if he had been gifted with the same powers of observing outward Nature , I have no doubt he would have G evinced as much ...
... artificial life ; and with artificial life , from his infirmities , he must have been chiefly conversant : But if he had been gifted with the same powers of observing outward Nature , I have no doubt he would have G evinced as much ...
Sivu 194
... artificial life , The Rape of the Lock will , first and last , present itself — a com- position , as Johnson justly observes , the ' most elegant , the most airy ' , of all his Works ; a composition , to which it will be in vain to ...
... artificial life , The Rape of the Lock will , first and last , present itself — a com- position , as Johnson justly observes , the ' most elegant , the most airy ' , of all his Works ; a composition , to which it will be in vain to ...
Sivu 201
... artificial to the natural in external objects , because he had a stronger fellow - feeling with the self - love of the maker or proprietor of a gewgaw , than admiration of that which was interesting to all mankind . He preferred the ...
... artificial to the natural in external objects , because he had a stronger fellow - feeling with the self - love of the maker or proprietor of a gewgaw , than admiration of that which was interesting to all mankind . He preferred the ...
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admiration allegory appear artificial beauty Ben Jonson better blank verse Canterbury Tales century character Chaucer classic Unity classical Collins Comus couplet Cowley criticism delight diction Donne Donne's Dryden Dunciad effect Elegy English poetry English Poets epic Essay excellence expression Faerie Queene fancy faults feeling genius give Gray Gray's harmony hath Homer human ideas imagery images imagination imitated intellectual John Donne John Milton Johnson judgment kind language learning lines Lycidas lyric manner masters meaning metaphysical metaphysical poets Milton mind moral nature never numbers observation Paradise Lost passage passion peculiar perfect perhaps pleasure poem poetical poetry Pope Pope's praise prose qualities reader rhyme satire seems sense sentiment Shakespeare sound Spenser spirit stanza style sublime T. S. Eliot taste things thought tion translation truth versification Virgil virtue whole words Wordsworth writing wrote