Criticism: The Major TextsWalter Jackson Bate Harcourt, Brace, 1952 - 610 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 73
Stran 180
... sense is due All may allow , but seek your friendship too . Be silent always when you doubt your sense , And speak , tho ' sure , with seeming diffidence : Some positive , persisting fops we know , Who , if once wrong , will needs be ...
... sense is due All may allow , but seek your friendship too . Be silent always when you doubt your sense , And speak , tho ' sure , with seeming diffidence : Some positive , persisting fops we know , Who , if once wrong , will needs be ...
Stran 325
... sense and experience , is , for the most part , a building with- out a foundation . The criticism exercised by reason then on common sense may be as severe as it pleases , but it must be as patient as it is severe . Hasty , dogmatical ...
... sense and experience , is , for the most part , a building with- out a foundation . The criticism exercised by reason then on common sense may be as severe as it pleases , but it must be as patient as it is severe . Hasty , dogmatical ...
Stran 583
... senses which we may imply thereby are worth examining . We may mean that the emotion is genuine in the sense that every product of a perfect mind would be genuine . It would result only from the prompting situation plus all the relevant ...
... senses which we may imply thereby are worth examining . We may mean that the emotion is genuine in the sense that every product of a perfect mind would be genuine . It would result only from the prompting situation plus all the relevant ...
Vsebina
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
CLASSICAL ANTIQUITY | 9 |
Horace | 49 |
Avtorske pravice | |
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action admiration ancient appear Aristotle artist beauty believe Ben Jonson blank verse century character Chaucer classical Coleridge comedy common criticism delight distinction drama Dryden effect Eliot emotion English epic Epic poetry essay Euripides example excellent expression feeling genius give Goethe Greek hath Hazlitt Homer human I. A. Richards ideal ideas Iliad images imagination imitation Irving Babbitt Johnson kind knowledge language learning less literary literature living Matthew Arnold means ment mind modern moral nature neoclassic neoclassicism never object particular passion perfect perhaps persons philosopher Plato play pleasure poem Poesy poet poetic poetry Pope present principles produced prose reader reason rhyme romantic romanticism rules Sainte-Beuve scenes sense sentiments Shakespeare Sophocles soul speak style sublime T. S. Eliot taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth ture unity verse whole words Wordsworth writing