Makers of Literary Criticism, Том 2Balachandra Rajan, Arapura Ghevarghese George Asia Publishing House, 1967 |
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Стр. 22
... philosophical satire , like that of Horace and Juvenal ; personal and occasional satire rarely comprehending sufficient of the general in the individual to be dignified with the name of poetry . Out of the three last classes has been ...
... philosophical satire , like that of Horace and Juvenal ; personal and occasional satire rarely comprehending sufficient of the general in the individual to be dignified with the name of poetry . Out of the three last classes has been ...
Стр. 161
... philosophers and poets has been anticipated . Plato was essentially a poet - the truth and splendour of his imagery , and the melody of his language , are the most intense that it is possible to conceive . He rejected the measure of the ...
... philosophers and poets has been anticipated . Plato was essentially a poet - the truth and splendour of his imagery , and the melody of his language , are the most intense that it is possible to conceive . He rejected the measure of the ...
Стр. 341
... philosophical imaginings have any place in true poetry ; and using them only for poetical purposes , is not too careful even to make them consistent with each other . To him , theories which for other men bring a world of technical ...
... philosophical imaginings have any place in true poetry ; and using them only for poetical purposes , is not too careful even to make them consistent with each other . To him , theories which for other men bring a world of technical ...
Содержание
Foreword | 1 |
NOTE TO THE THORN 1800 | 15 |
ESSAY SUPPLEMENTARY TO The Preface 1815 | 33 |
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Makers of Literary Criticism, Том 2 Balachandra Rajan,Arapura Ghevarghese George Просмотр фрагмента - 1965 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
admiration Aeschylus appear artist beauty become Bishop Colenso character Chaucer colour common composition conscious criticism Dante delight diction distinction divine drama effect English English poetry estimate Euripides excellence excitement existence expression fact faculty fancy feeling French Revolution genius Goethe harmony heart Herodotus human ideas Iliad images imagination impression instance intellectual judgement kind language less lines literary literature living Lyrical Ballads manner means metre metrical Milton mind moral nation nature never novel object original Paradise Lost passages passion pathetic fallacy peculiar perfect perhaps Petrarch philosophical Pindar pleasure poem poet poet's poetical poetry practical praise present principle produced prose reader religion rhyme seems sense sentiment Shakespeare song Sophocles soul speak spirit stanza style taste things thou thought true truth verse Voltaire whole words Wordsworth Wordsworthian writings