Plato to Elliot: A Literary CriticismKitab Mahal, 1965 - 198 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 27
... Poetry seeks to transform facts into truths . Poetry gives us what ' ought to be ' ; the probability or improbability of poetry is to be judged by the internal structure of a poem . The task of the poet is to bring about a harmonious ...
... Poetry seeks to transform facts into truths . Poetry gives us what ' ought to be ' ; the probability or improbability of poetry is to be judged by the internal structure of a poem . The task of the poet is to bring about a harmonious ...
الصفحة 64
... poetry against the attacks of Plato and Gosson , he proceeds to consider the objections raised by " contem- porary Philistines " . At the very outset he says that verse may be only an ornament to poetry . Rhyming may better poetry but ...
... poetry against the attacks of Plato and Gosson , he proceeds to consider the objections raised by " contem- porary Philistines " . At the very outset he says that verse may be only an ornament to poetry . Rhyming may better poetry but ...
الصفحة 154
... poetry thinks , and the arts do not . ” Poetry speaks through emotions ; it gives thoughts ' invested with beauty , with emotion . ' Best poetry comes from a poet whose personality has attained its supreme unfoldment , and where ...
... poetry thinks , and the arts do not . ” Poetry speaks through emotions ; it gives thoughts ' invested with beauty , with emotion . ' Best poetry comes from a poet whose personality has attained its supreme unfoldment , and where ...
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