English Critical Essays: (nineteenth Century)Edmund David Jones Oxford University Press, 1956 - 522 páginas |
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Página 94
... seems real and is exclusively attended to , the crime is comparatively nothing . But when we see these things represented , the acts which they do are comparatively everything , their impulses nothing . The state of sublime emotion into ...
... seems real and is exclusively attended to , the crime is comparatively nothing . But when we see these things represented , the acts which they do are comparatively everything , their impulses nothing . The state of sublime emotion into ...
Página 226
... seem as if she , held apart from him , far apart at last in the dim Eternity , were the only one he had ever with his whole strength of affec- tion loved . She died : Dante himself was wedded ; but it seems not happily , far from ...
... seem as if she , held apart from him , far apart at last in the dim Eternity , were the only one he had ever with his whole strength of affec- tion loved . She died : Dante himself was wedded ; but it seems not happily , far from ...
Página 515
... seems to have caught and fixed for ever in immutable grace the most evanescent and intangible of our intuitions , the very ripple - marks on the remotest shores of being . But this intensity of mood which insures high quality is by its ...
... seems to have caught and fixed for ever in immutable grace the most evanescent and intangible of our intuitions , the very ripple - marks on the remotest shores of being . But this intensity of mood which insures high quality is by its ...
Contenido
JOHN RUSKIN 18191900 | 323 |
JOHN STUART MILL 18061873 | 341 |
WALTER BAGEHOT 18261877 | 368 |
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Términos y frases comunes
action beauty become called character Chaucer Coleridge Coleridge's colour common composition criticism Dante delight diction divine drama effect elements emotion Enoch Arden eternal excitement expression fact faculty Faerie Queene fancy feeling genius give Goethe happy heart heaven highest human idea images imagination impression instance intellect judgement kind language less living look Lyrical Ballads Macbeth manner meaning metre metrical Milton mind modern moral nature Nether Stowey never object Orlando Furioso Othello painting Paradise Lost passion pathetic fallacy peculiar perfect perhaps person Petrarch philosopher pleasure poem poet poet's poetic diction poetical poetry present Priam principle produced Prophet prose reader reason rhyme sacred sacred poet seems sense Shakespeare Sophocles sort soul speak Spenser spirit stanza style sympathy taste things thou thought tion true truth utter verse whole William Wordsworth words Wordsworth write