Plato to Elliot: A Literary CriticismKitab Mahal, 1965 - 198 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة 37
... takes those moments when life appears to be idle and distorted , a thing of vanity and nothingness ; it brings out its negative side , its inherent limitations ; it exhibits situations in which the sense of the ideal is lost under an ...
... takes those moments when life appears to be idle and distorted , a thing of vanity and nothingness ; it brings out its negative side , its inherent limitations ; it exhibits situations in which the sense of the ideal is lost under an ...
الصفحة 65
... take the larger meaning of the term , it heralds birth of something that rejects not the old and takes not the new but always wants to extend all the existing dimensions . Bibliography 1. An Apologie for Poetrie , ed . by Edward Arber ...
... take the larger meaning of the term , it heralds birth of something that rejects not the old and takes not the new but always wants to extend all the existing dimensions . Bibliography 1. An Apologie for Poetrie , ed . by Edward Arber ...
الصفحة 75
... takes up independent genres of poetry and asks the poets ambitious to write them to follow the classics as models and to follow them to the letter . For pastoral - one should emulate Theocritus and Virgil : For guides take Virgil , and ...
... takes up independent genres of poetry and asks the poets ambitious to write them to follow the classics as models and to follow them to the letter . For pastoral - one should emulate Theocritus and Virgil : For guides take Virgil , and ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
action aesthetic ancient appreciation Aristotle Arnold artist beauty Ben Jonson Boileau brings century character classical classical unities Coleridge comedy conception conscious creation Croce Dante David Daiches delight drama Dryden Eliot emotion English Criticism epic essay Euripides expression fancy feels Goethe Greek harmony Hazlitt Homer Horace human I. A. Richards ideal ideas imagination imitation inspired intellectual interested intuition Johnson Lamb language literary criticism literature Longinus Marxist matter Matthew Arnold means mind Modern Criticism moral nature neo-classic critics neo-classicism never object passions Pater personality philosophical Plato pleasure plot poem poet poetry Pope practical criticism present principles production prose psychological qualities Quintilian readers reality Renaissance Rene Wellek Richards romantic Sainte-Beuve Saintsbury says Scaliger seeks sense Shakespeare Shelley Sidney social soul speaks spirit style Sublime T. S. Eliot takes talks theory things thought tion tradition tragedy true truth unity Wimsatt words Wordsworth writers