The Garment of Praise: The Necessity for PoetryDoubleday, Doran, Incorporated, 1929 - 401 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 27
Stran 178
... accepted to - day , but that in no way effects Milton's vision or Milton's poetry.1 What is Milton's answer , as given in the two great epics , to the problem of evil as he envisaged it ? In a prose outline , of course , his answer ...
... accepted to - day , but that in no way effects Milton's vision or Milton's poetry.1 What is Milton's answer , as given in the two great epics , to the problem of evil as he envisaged it ? In a prose outline , of course , his answer ...
Stran 329
... accepted , by pointing out that their conclusions are neither inevitable nor particularly logical , since they are ... accepted . I shall now give my grounds for believing that it must not be accepted . Every one has a tendency to ...
... accepted , by pointing out that their conclusions are neither inevitable nor particularly logical , since they are ... accepted . I shall now give my grounds for believing that it must not be accepted . Every one has a tendency to ...
Stran 359
... acceptance of what he feels to be an unworthy or wasteful life . The fact that modern civilisation fosters this spiritual poverty in a prodigious fashion does not controvert the more important fact that there is no reason why with ...
... acceptance of what he feels to be an unworthy or wasteful life . The fact that modern civilisation fosters this spiritual poverty in a prodigious fashion does not controvert the more important fact that there is no reason why with ...
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
The Garment of Praise: The Necessity for Poetry Eleanor Carroll Chilton,Herbert Agar Prikaz kratkega opisa - 1929 |
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
Arnold artist attempt beauty believe Beowulf Catholic Chaucer Christianity Church civilisation conception conscious contemporary course Cynewulf Danelaw death Deists Demogorgon divine Divine Comedy earth effect Eighteenth Century emotions England English epic expression external fact faith feeling Hardy Henry VIII heroic human idea ideal imagination important individual industrial revolution intellectual intuitive intuitive knowledge King knowledge liberty literature lives man's material Matthew Arnold means medieval ment Middle Ages Milton mind modern world moral nature never Norsemen Paradise Lost passion period philosophy picture Plato poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Pope prose Protestantism pure Puritan qualities question reader reason Reformation religion religious revolution romance scientific seems sense sentimental Seventeenth Century Shakespeare Shelley significance soul spirit Stoicism story suggest Swinburne things thou thought Thucydides tion to-day true truth unconscious unconscious mind verse Victorian whole words Wordsworth wrote