The Criticism of LiteratureMacmillan, 1928 - 397 sivua |
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Tulokset 1 - 3 kokonaismäärästä 35
Sivu 22
... seen it for a long time or never seen its like before . / The tolerant critic is free from prejudice on the score of other things beside youth and age . He is not one of those described in the couplet , Some , valuing those of their own ...
... seen it for a long time or never seen its like before . / The tolerant critic is free from prejudice on the score of other things beside youth and age . He is not one of those described in the couplet , Some , valuing those of their own ...
Sivu 211
... seen with the eye of imagination . This , as has been suggested in a previous chapter , is the process of putting ... seen one . If he gets an image at all , it will probably be an erroneous one . A man who has seen locomotives may ...
... seen with the eye of imagination . This , as has been suggested in a previous chapter , is the process of putting ... seen one . If he gets an image at all , it will probably be an erroneous one . A man who has seen locomotives may ...
Sivu 309
... seen below them under the stars and the moon . One of them may have viewed the valley from only a moderate height ; but even from that vantage point the aspect of familiar things has changed , and new relations are perceived - relations ...
... seen below them under the stars and the moon . One of them may have viewed the valley from only a moderate height ; but even from that vantage point the aspect of familiar things has changed , and new relations are perceived - relations ...
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A. A. Milne æsthetic appeal Aristotle artist beauty biography century chapter character climax closet drama creative critic definite delight detail Dickens drama Dryden E. E. Cummings E. V. Lucas Elinor Wylie epic essay ethical expression fact familiar feeling fiction free verse genius give harmony human humor iambic pentameter idea images imagination instance intellectual value interest interpretation Jane Austen Keats Letty lines literary literature lyric Macmillan material means merely metrical mind modern moral narrative nature never novel novelist Olivia Paradise Lost passage perhaps picture play pleasure plot poem poet poetic experience poetry present prose Psychology of Beauty purpose reader realize rhyme rhythm scene sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's significance sometimes sound speech spirit stanza story structure style suggested symbol things thought tion true truth unity Vanity Fair verse vision whole words Wordsworth writer