English Critical Essays: (nineteenth Century)Edmund David Jones Oxford University Press, 1956 - 522 páginas |
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Página 57
... tion , and therefore excites the question : Why is the attention to be thus stimulated ? Now the ques- tion cannot be answered by the pleasure of the metre itself : for this we have shown to be conditional , and dependent on the ...
... tion , and therefore excites the question : Why is the attention to be thus stimulated ? Now the ques- tion cannot be answered by the pleasure of the metre itself : for this we have shown to be conditional , and dependent on the ...
Página 347
... tion between poetry and eloquence appears to us to be equally fundamental with the distinction between poetry and narrative , or between poetry and descrip- tion , while it is still farther from having been satis- factorily cleared up ...
... tion between poetry and eloquence appears to us to be equally fundamental with the distinction between poetry and narrative , or between poetry and descrip- tion , while it is still farther from having been satis- factorily cleared up ...
Página 392
... tion and its fullness , but it aims at so doing in a manner most different . It wishes to surround the type with the greatest number of circumstances which it will bear . It works not by choice and selec- tion , but by accumulation and ...
... tion and its fullness , but it aims at so doing in a manner most different . It wishes to surround the type with the greatest number of circumstances which it will bear . It works not by choice and selec- tion , but by accumulation and ...
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