The Art of Literary CriticismD. Appleton-Century Company, incorporated, 1941 - 689 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 85
Stran 1
... Law - schools can teach the written law , or statutes , and enable a candidate to pass the bar examinations ; but this candidate may not become a jurist , like the scholar who has studied the significant law cases of the last twenty ...
... Law - schools can teach the written law , or statutes , and enable a candidate to pass the bar examinations ; but this candidate may not become a jurist , like the scholar who has studied the significant law cases of the last twenty ...
Stran 266
... laws of nature , and those rules are supposed co - eval with reason , of which the first rise cannot be discovered . Criticism has sometimes permitted fancy to dictate the laws by which fancy ought to be restrained , and fallacy to ...
... laws of nature , and those rules are supposed co - eval with reason , of which the first rise cannot be discovered . Criticism has sometimes permitted fancy to dictate the laws by which fancy ought to be restrained , and fallacy to ...
Stran 660
... laws of fiction may be laid down and taught with as much precision and exactness as the laws of harmony , per- spective , and proportion " he mitigates what might appear to be an extravagance by applying his remark to " general " laws ...
... laws of fiction may be laid down and taught with as much precision and exactness as the laws of harmony , per- spective , and proportion " he mitigates what might appear to be an extravagance by applying his remark to " general " laws ...
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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