The Nature of LiteratureHorizon Press, 1956 - 381 strani |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–3 od 63
Stran 42
... expression , but absolutely of essence . It is not a case of the mind , in need of expression , choosing between two ways- one poetry , the other prose . There is no choice for the par- ticular state of mind in which poetry originates ...
... expression , but absolutely of essence . It is not a case of the mind , in need of expression , choosing between two ways- one poetry , the other prose . There is no choice for the par- ticular state of mind in which poetry originates ...
Stran 282
... expression of this state was evident enough . In her childhood the villagers thought her more like a boy than a girl . ' She should have been a man : a great navigator ! ' cried M. Heger , despite his horror of her intractability ...
... expression of this state was evident enough . In her childhood the villagers thought her more like a boy than a girl . ' She should have been a man : a great navigator ! ' cried M. Heger , despite his horror of her intractability ...
Stran 289
... expression became a more serious necessity as an escape from emotional agitations too strong to be repressed with impunity , then the mere mechanism of literary expression was ready at their command . This is to put the matter on its ...
... expression became a more serious necessity as an escape from emotional agitations too strong to be repressed with impunity , then the mere mechanism of literary expression was ready at their command . This is to put the matter on its ...
Vsebina
INTRODUCTION page | 11 |
The Nature of Poetry | 17 |
POETIC DICTION | 41 |
Avtorske pravice | |
17 preostalih delov ni prikazanih
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
abstract analysis artist Bagehot beauty century character classical Coleridge conception conscious creative definition Descartes distinction Don Quixote dream earl emotional English English poetry essay essential experience expression fact feeling free verse Freud Froissart genius Gerard Manley Hopkins glory Gulliver's Travels Hawthorne Henry James Hopkins Hopkins's human humour ideal ideas images imagination inspiration instinctive intellectual intelligence intuition Jane Eyre kind knights letter literary criticism literature long poem lyrical Malory mean mental merely metaphor metaphysical poetry mind modern moral myth nature never obscurity original passage passion Patmore Patmore's perhaps personality phantasy philosophy poet poetic prose psycho-analysis psychological question reality rhythm romantic romanticism seems sense sensibility sentiment Sir Kay Smollett spirit sprung rhythm Sterne Sterne's style Swift theory things thought tion Tristram Shandy truth unconscious values Vauvenargues Vauvenargues's verse virtue whole words write written wrote Wuthering Heights