Poetics: An Essay on PoetrySmith, Elder, and Company, 1969 - 294 pagina's |
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Pagina 47
... become water ; a little more heat will turn the water into steam . Thus will a mere increase of imagination thaw the ... becomes poetry , just as ice , glass , and iron have each a degree at which they melt . Not to carry the comparison ...
... become water ; a little more heat will turn the water into steam . Thus will a mere increase of imagination thaw the ... becomes poetry , just as ice , glass , and iron have each a degree at which they melt . Not to carry the comparison ...
Pagina 69
... become a dragon without devouring another ser- pent , a writer cannot become a critic worthy of the name , without first preying upon a brother penman . It is indeed a question whether we are not now going to the other extreme of ...
... become a dragon without devouring another ser- pent , a writer cannot become a critic worthy of the name , without first preying upon a brother penman . It is indeed a question whether we are not now going to the other extreme of ...
Pagina 149
... become to sing that song save with the mouth . If it was deemed becoming in the early Italian painters , ( dramatists as they were ) that they should lead a strictly religious life , much more is it meet that he , whose hymns would ever ...
... become to sing that song save with the mouth . If it was deemed becoming in the early Italian painters , ( dramatists as they were ) that they should lead a strictly religious life , much more is it meet that he , whose hymns would ever ...
Inhoudsopgave
Page | 14 |
The Law of Unconsciousness | 27 |
The Law of Imagination | 45 |
Copyright | |
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action activity Æneid Aristotle artist Bacon beautiful believe belongs Bishop Butler blank verse called chiefly Christian classical Clement of Rome commonly comparison conscience critics Divine doctrine doubt drama dramatic art dramatist Dugald Stewart effect endeavour English epic Euripides Euroclydon expression fact faculty faith former Freedom give Greek happiness heart heaven Homer human idea Iliad imagery imagination imitative Immortality influence instinct Jeremy Collier kinds of poesy language latter law of poetry least less look lyrical manner means metaphor metre mind modern narrative nature never object perhaps philosopher pleasure plurality poem poet poetic feeling present prose reality reason regard remarkable rhyme romantic self-consciousness sense Shakespere shown simile simply Sir Philip Sidney song Sophocles soul speak spirit stanza tell theory things Thomas à Kempis thought tion true truly truth uncon unconsciousness utterance whole words Wordsworth