Poetics: An Essay on PoetrySmith, Elder, and Company, 1852 - 294 pagina's |
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Pagina 5
... question , and that his methinketh must go for nothing , as not pro- fessing to be founded on a peculiar experience . The shortest way then of settling the point is by recalling the fact that men of undoubted genius , such as Johnson ...
... question , and that his methinketh must go for nothing , as not pro- fessing to be founded on a peculiar experience . The shortest way then of settling the point is by recalling the fact that men of undoubted genius , such as Johnson ...
Pagina 10
... question , What is poetry ? we have only to do with the former , namely , with the feeling of poetry , however it may have arisen , whether unaware and from the unknown depths of our own soul , or by reading the pages of a book , or by ...
... question , What is poetry ? we have only to do with the former , namely , with the feeling of poetry , however it may have arisen , whether unaware and from the unknown depths of our own soul , or by reading the pages of a book , or by ...
Pagina 27
... dull and weary ; it would be as bright with sunshine as the past and the future , were we to take it as it is , and ask no questions . Thus also would England now be as merry as old England , .. 27 The Law of Unconsciousness,
... dull and weary ; it would be as bright with sunshine as the past and the future , were we to take it as it is , and ask no questions . Thus also would England now be as merry as old England , .. 27 The Law of Unconsciousness,
Pagina 31
... question , but rejoiced greatly in what they saw . For why ? The one sort beheld in Christ only that which they knew was more than natural , but yet their affection was not rapt there- with through any great extraordinary gladness ; the ...
... question , but rejoiced greatly in what they saw . For why ? The one sort beheld in Christ only that which they knew was more than natural , but yet their affection was not rapt there- with through any great extraordinary gladness ; the ...
Pagina 45
... question , What kind of pleasure is poetry ? we are at once launched into a consideration of the first law . For , as was remarked in closing the analysis of pleasure , the third law slides into the second , and both slide into the ...
... question , What kind of pleasure is poetry ? we are at once launched into a consideration of the first law . For , as was remarked in closing the analysis of pleasure , the third law slides into the second , and both slide into the ...
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Æneid Æschylus Aristotle artist Bacon beautiful belongs Berkeley Berkeley blank verse CALIFORNIA LIBRARY called chiefly Christian classical cloth critics Divine doctrine drama dramatic art dramatist Dugald Stewart Edition endeavours English epic Euripides expression fact faculty faith Fcap former Freedom give Greek happiness HARRIET MARTINEAU heart Homer idea Illustrations imagery imagination imitative Immortality India Jane Eyre Jeremy Collier JOHN RUSKIN JOHN WILLIAM KAYE kinds of poesy language latter law of poetry less look lyrical manner means metaphor metre mind modern narrative nature never object perhaps philosopher pleasure plurality poem poet poetic feeling Post 8vo present prose reality reason regard remarkable rhyme romantic Ruskin self-consciousness sense Shakespere simile simply song Sophocles soul speak spirit stanza tell theory things thought tion true truly truth uncon unconsciousness UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA utterance vols whole words Wordsworth