Poetics: An Essay on PoetrySmith, Elder, and Company, 1969 - 294 pagina's |
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Pagina 86
... words , which if they expressed any thing more than the terms , ancient and modern , formerly in use , kept their meaning to themselves , dark and miserly as the cabala . Ancient and modern - these were words denoting a plain histo ...
... words , which if they expressed any thing more than the terms , ancient and modern , formerly in use , kept their meaning to themselves , dark and miserly as the cabala . Ancient and modern - these were words denoting a plain histo ...
Pagina 203
... words in going along ; as what to the Greek was but a single word πρóσоikos , express- ing a single thought , neighbour , is now , according to the German fashion of using the terminal sigma in the middle of such a compound , virtually ...
... words in going along ; as what to the Greek was but a single word πρóσоikos , express- ing a single thought , neighbour , is now , according to the German fashion of using the terminal sigma in the middle of such a compound , virtually ...
Pagina 224
... word in a meta- phorical sense . This latter is so very far from being plain that it is at present the fashionable theory , and especially is be- friended by that crowded class of writers whose words turn up like the tickets of a ...
... word in a meta- phorical sense . This latter is so very far from being plain that it is at present the fashionable theory , and especially is be- friended by that crowded class of writers whose words turn up like the tickets of a ...
Inhoudsopgave
The Law of Activity | 18 |
The Law of Unconsciousness | 27 |
The Law of Imagination | 45 |
Copyright | |
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action activity Æschylus Aristotle artist Bacon beautiful belongs blank verse called chiefly Christ Christian classical Clement of Rome commonly comparison couplet critics Divine doctrine doubt drama dramatic art dramatist Dugald Stewart employed endeavours English epic Euripides Euroclydon expression fact faculty faith former Freedom genius give Greek happiness heart heaven Hebrew Homer idea Iliad imagery imagination imitative Immortality instinct Jeremy Collier John Keats 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 seen 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 utterance whole words Wordsworth