Form and Thought in ProseWilfred Stone, Robert Hoopes Ronald Press Company, 1960 - Всего страниц: 686 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 87
Стр. 172
... feeling for aristocracy ( which , indeed , includes the ideal of chivalry ) persisted from age to age , in different guises , not only as an overwhelming value but , in fact , as absolute necessity . Literature supported this feeling ...
... feeling for aristocracy ( which , indeed , includes the ideal of chivalry ) persisted from age to age , in different guises , not only as an overwhelming value but , in fact , as absolute necessity . Literature supported this feeling ...
Стр. 177
... feeling for aristocracy were the political aristocracy itself ( in spite of its actual turpitude ) , the church with its saints or prophets ( in spite of its actual turpitude ) and the artists . The artists were either employees of the ...
... feeling for aristocracy were the political aristocracy itself ( in spite of its actual turpitude ) , the church with its saints or prophets ( in spite of its actual turpitude ) and the artists . The artists were either employees of the ...
Стр. 227
... feeling any more than it calms the anxiety to " find room " : it only represses and muffles the feeling , which continues to lie , intact , at the bottom . Furthermore , the experience of the crowd is not freely chosen . One is in a ...
... feeling any more than it calms the anxiety to " find room " : it only represses and muffles the feeling , which continues to lie , intact , at the bottom . Furthermore , the experience of the crowd is not freely chosen . One is in a ...
Содержание
Introduction | 3 |
THE APOSTATE | 18 |
Writing and Reading | 48 |
Авторские права | |
Не показаны другие разделы: 21
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
abstraction American argument beauty become believe Buddhism C. S. Lewis called civilization clubs course criticism culture define definition emotional Erich Fromm essay Etienne Gilson evil example existence experience fact feeling football freedom give H. L. Mencken hand Harvard Hebraism Hebraism and Hellenism Hellenism highbrow human Huxley ideal ideas individual intellectual kind knowledge less live logical look man's mass matter means middlebrow mind Mitty mock reader modern Mollycoddle moral nature never objective opinion person philosophers Plato Pleb poetry political President Problems for Thought Professor question reason Red-blood religion religious Richard Altick Robert Gorham Davis scientific seems sense Smurch social society spirit statement syllogism things Thought and Writing tion Trout true truth universe W. H. Auden Walter Mitty Western words young