The Art of Literary CriticismD. Appleton-Century Company, incorporated, 1941 - 689 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 66
Stran 83
... heart is the knot of the veins and the wellspring of the blood that courses round impetuously , and it is stationed in the guard - house of the body . The passages by which the blood races this way and that he names alleys . He says ...
... heart is the knot of the veins and the wellspring of the blood that courses round impetuously , and it is stationed in the guard - house of the body . The passages by which the blood races this way and that he names alleys . He says ...
Stran 301
... heart . As what comes from the writer's heart , reaches ours ; so what comes from his head , sets our brains at work , and our hearts at ease . It makes a circle of thoughtful critics , not of dis- tressed patients ; and a passive ...
... heart . As what comes from the writer's heart , reaches ours ; so what comes from his head , sets our brains at work , and our hearts at ease . It makes a circle of thoughtful critics , not of dis- tressed patients ; and a passive ...
Stran 445
... heart of man , -if all at once he should hear the death - like stillness broken up by the sound of wheels rattling ... heart and the entrance of the fiendish heart was to be expressed and made sensible . Another On the Knocking at the ...
... heart of man , -if all at once he should hear the death - like stillness broken up by the sound of wheels rattling ... heart and the entrance of the fiendish heart was to be expressed and made sensible . Another On the Knocking at the ...
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action admiration Æneid Æschylus ancient appear Aristotle artist beauty Ben Jonson blank verse called character charm Chaucer classic comedy composition criticism delight Demosthenes diction divine dramatic Dryden effect English epic Epic poetry essay Euripides excellent excitement expression eyes fancy feeling French genius give Goethe Greek hath heart Homer Horace human idea Iliad imagination imitation judgment kind language Laocoön less literary literature living Longinus manner matter means ment metre mind modern Molière moral nature never novel object painting passion perfect persons philosopher Pindar Plato play pleasure plot poem poesy poet poet's poetic poetry praise produced prose Quintilian reader reason rhyme rules Sainte-Beuve scene sense Shakespeare Sophocles soul speak spirit style sublime taste things thought tion tragedy translation true truth verse Virgil whole words Wordsworth write