The Art of Literary CriticismD. Appleton-Century Company, incorporated, 1941 - 689 strani |
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Zadetki 1–3 od 72
Stran 134
... sense , and doubtful writing hath wracked me beyond my patience . The reason why a poet is said that he ought to ... sense are as the body and the soul . The sense is as the life and soul of language , without which all words are dead ...
... sense , and doubtful writing hath wracked me beyond my patience . The reason why a poet is said that he ought to ... sense are as the body and the soul . The sense is as the life and soul of language , without which all words are dead ...
Stran 209
... sense naturally , and the due placing them adapts the rhyme to it . If you object that one verse may be made for the sake of another , though both the words and rhyme be apt , I answer , it cannot pos- sibly so fall out ; for either ...
... sense naturally , and the due placing them adapts the rhyme to it . If you object that one verse may be made for the sake of another , though both the words and rhyme be apt , I answer , it cannot pos- sibly so fall out ; for either ...
Stran 259
... 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 ...
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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