Artists and Thinkers |
Iz vsebine knjige
Zadetki 1–5 od 46
Stran 4
... , character , milieu , and what not . And the philosopher at his best and at his worst is often a poet . I grant you there is little poetry in Locke ; not five drops of poetic essence could be distilled from 4 ARTISTS AND THINKERS.
... , character , milieu , and what not . And the philosopher at his best and at his worst is often a poet . I grant you there is little poetry in Locke ; not five drops of poetic essence could be distilled from 4 ARTISTS AND THINKERS.
Stran 5
Louis Willaim Flaccus. not five drops of poetic essence could be distilled from his entire philosophy . But over against him may be set men like Plato , in whom the wealth and ... poetry when it exchanged the majestic verse of INTRODUCTORY 5.
Louis Willaim Flaccus. not five drops of poetic essence could be distilled from his entire philosophy . But over against him may be set men like Plato , in whom the wealth and ... poetry when it exchanged the majestic verse of INTRODUCTORY 5.
Stran 6
Louis Willaim Flaccus. closeness to poetry when it exchanged the majestic verse of a Lucretius or an Empedocles for a crabbed terminology and a jargon not unlike cracked var- nish , but the artistic foundation is still there . The ...
Louis Willaim Flaccus. closeness to poetry when it exchanged the majestic verse of a Lucretius or an Empedocles for a crabbed terminology and a jargon not unlike cracked var- nish , but the artistic foundation is still there . The ...
Stran 9
... poets and war poets no harm . The true value of thought for art seems to me to depend on its indirectness and emotional suggestive- ness . This is the rôle it plays in Rodin and in Maeterlinck . They make you feel the thrust of the ...
... poets and war poets no harm . The true value of thought for art seems to me to depend on its indirectness and emotional suggestive- ness . This is the rôle it plays in Rodin and in Maeterlinck . They make you feel the thrust of the ...
Stran 11
... poetry are vibrant with the spirit of the times ; why should sculpture alone of all the arts fail to give something of the passionateness and rich- ness of modern life ? Rodin has proved once for all that the fault lies not with ...
... poetry are vibrant with the spirit of the times ; why should sculpture alone of all the arts fail to give something of the passionateness and rich- ness of modern life ? Rodin has proved once for all that the fault lies not with ...
Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse
Pogosti izrazi in povedi
æsthetic Apollonian and Dionysian artist asked beauty becomes Birth of Tragedy Burghers of Calais character clue color complete consciousness contrast cosmic creative culture dance demand divine doctrine of eternal Ecce Homo emotional essays eternal recurrence everything expression feeling force fragmentary gives Greek Hegel human idea ideal imagery imagination imitation individual inner intellectual intense interest interpretation King Lear lacks Leitmotif light Maeter Maeterlinck Marcus Aurelius marks meaning modern mood moral movement music drama nature ness Nietzsche Nietzsche's opera organic unity painting passages passion pessimism philosophy plastic play poet poetry principle problem reflects rich Rodin Rodin's art Schopenhauer sculpture seems self-expression sharply significance simply soul Spake Zarathustra spirit strength strong struggle subtle suggests Superman surface symbolism Tannhäuser technique theory of art things Thinker thought tion Tolstoy Tolstoy's tragedy tragic Tristan und Isolde true art truth turn ugly universe Wagner weakness
Priljubljeni odlomki
Stran 154 - Art is a human activity consisting in this, that one man consciously by means of certain external signs, hands on to others feelings he has lived through, and that others are infected by these feelings and also experience them.
Stran 155 - It is always complied with in peasant art, and this explains why such art always acts so powerfully ; but it is a condition almost entirely absent from our upper-class art, which is continually produced by artists actuated by personal aims of covetousness or vanity.
Stran 154 - To evoke in oneself a feeling one has once experienced, and having evoked it in oneself, then, by means of movements, lines, colours, sounds, or forms expressed in words, so to transmit that feeling that others may experience the same feeling— this is the activity of art.
Stran 93 - Wie es fassen? Wie sie lassen. Diese Wonne fern der Sonne Fern der Tage Trennungsklage? Ohne Wähnen sanftes Sehnen, Ohne Bangen süß Verlangen; Ohne Wehen hehr Vergehen, Ohne Schmachten hold Umnachten; Ohne Scheiden ohne Meiden, Traut allein ewig heim.
Stran 196 - Wie? Ward die Welt nicht eben vollkommen? Rund und reif? Oh des goldenen runden Reifs — wohin fliegt er wohl?
Stran 95 - Höre ich nur diese Weise, die so wundervoll und leise, Wonne klagend, Alles sagend, mild versöhnend aus ihm tönend in mich dringet, auf sich schwinget, hold erhallend um mich klinget?
Stran 52 - Hilda and Solness are, I believe, the first characters in drama who feel, for an instant, that they are living in the atmosphere of the soul; and the discovery of this essential life that exists in them, beyond the life of every day, comes fraught with terror.
Stran 183 - Leben: Gold sah ich in deinem Nacht-Auge blinken, — mein Herz stand still vor dieser Wollust: - einen goldenen Kahn sah ich blinken auf nächtigen Gewässern, einen sinkenden, trinkenden, wieder winkenden goldenen Schaukel-Kahn!
Stran 93 - Halt ich dich fest? Ist es kein Trug? Ist es kein Traum? O Wonne der Seele! O süße, hehrste, kühnste, schönste, seligste Lust! Ohne-Gleichel Koerreichel Überselig! Ewig! Ewig! Ungeahnte, nie gekannte, überschwenglich hoch erhabne! Freudejauchzen! Lustentzücken! Himmelhöchstes Weltentrücken! Mein, Tristan! Mein, Isolde!
Stran 148 - My life had come to a sudden stop. I was able to breathe, to eat, to drink, to sleep. I could not, indeed, help doing so; but there was no real life in me.