Hazlitt, the Mind of a CriticOxford University Press, 1983 - 450 pagina's |
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Pagina 101
... William Gifford . " The passage is all the more striking because the " Letter " for the most part sustains a grandly impersonal tone . Gifford was worth Hazlitt's attention only in his official role as editor of the Tory Quarterly ...
... William Gifford . " The passage is all the more striking because the " Letter " for the most part sustains a grandly impersonal tone . Gifford was worth Hazlitt's attention only in his official role as editor of the Tory Quarterly ...
Pagina 102
... William Gifford " : " You have an ugly trick of saying what is not true of any one you do not like ; and it will be the object of this letter to cure you of it " -to the opening paragraph of " Mr. Gifford " in The Spirit of the Age ...
... William Gifford " : " You have an ugly trick of saying what is not true of any one you do not like ; and it will be the object of this letter to cure you of it " -to the opening paragraph of " Mr. Gifford " in The Spirit of the Age ...
Pagina 365
... William Gifford " was pub- lished , Hazlitt seemed to Keats almost an embodiment of the mod- ern idea of genius . Even more intriguing than this journal - letter is a slightly earlier one , which quotes a shorter passage of Hazlitt's ...
... William Gifford " was pub- lished , Hazlitt seemed to Keats almost an embodiment of the mod- ern idea of genius . Even more intriguing than this journal - letter is a slightly earlier one , which quotes a shorter passage of Hazlitt's ...
Inhoudsopgave
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
IMAGINATION | 24 |
INTEREST HABIT ASSOCIATION | 58 |
Copyright | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
abstract action admiration allusion appears argument artist associations beauty Burke Burke's Byron Caliban called character Coleridge Coleridge's common Coriolanus criticism Critique of Judgment death disinterested distinct Edinburgh Review effect egotism egotistical elective affinity Elgin Marbles essay faculty feel French Revolution genius give Godwin habit Hazlitt human Hume Hunt Iago Ibid idea ideal imagination imitation impression interest John Keats judgment Kant Keats Keats's language lecture Leigh Hunt less letter look Lord Byron means ment metaphysical Milton mind moral motives nature never object once painting passage passion philosophy phrase play poem poet poetry politics praise principle prose quoted reader reason romantic seems sense sentence sentiments Shakespeare Shylock sion sort soul speak spirit style sublime suppose sympathy taste things thought tion truth Tucker understanding whole William Gifford William Hazlitt words Wordsworth writing wrote