Plato to Elliot: A Literary CriticismKitab Mahal, 1965 - 198 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 56
... perfection in the hands of Jonson , Dryden and Boilean . Spingonn sums it up admirably : " This evolution may by traced ...... through three distinct stages , and these stages may be indicated by doctrines respectively of Vida ...
... perfection in the hands of Jonson , Dryden and Boilean . Spingonn sums it up admirably : " This evolution may by traced ...... through three distinct stages , and these stages may be indicated by doctrines respectively of Vida ...
الصفحة 152
... perfection , its desire simply to make reason and the will of God prevail , its freedom from fanaticism , by its attitude towards all this machinery , even while it insists that it is machinery . Fanatics , seeing the mischief men do ...
... perfection , its desire simply to make reason and the will of God prevail , its freedom from fanaticism , by its attitude towards all this machinery , even while it insists that it is machinery . Fanatics , seeing the mischief men do ...
الصفحة 153
... perfection as its goal - the perfection that is the result of synthesisation of thought and action . This ideal of human perfection - of the integration of the ' total man ' is the ideal of Matthew Arnold . Poetry , he believes , helps ...
... perfection as its goal - the perfection that is the result of synthesisation of thought and action . This ideal of human perfection - of the integration of the ' total man ' is the ideal of Matthew Arnold . Poetry , he believes , helps ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
accept according action activity Aeschylus aesthetic ancient appears appreciation approach Aristotle Arnold artist asks beauty believes brings called century character classical Coleridge comedy common conception conscious creation deals definition delight distinction drama Dryden effect Eliot emotion English epic essay essential experience expression fact fancy feels follow forces gives Greek human ideal ideas imagination imitation importance inspired interested Johnson kind knowledge language literary criticism literature living Marxism matter means mind moral nature never object particular passions past perfection personality philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poetic poetry practical present principles production qualities readers reality reason relations romantic rules says seeks sense Shakespeare Sidney social soul speaks spirit style takes talks theory things thought tion tradition tragedy true truth unity universal wants whole Wordsworth writers