Johnson, Arnold, and Eliot as Literary HumanistsRobert Mary Drum, 1965 - 458 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 7
الصفحة 67
... developed , and where as yet neither any subject nor object exists . And it means , in the second place , anything which is present at any stage of mental life , in so far as that is only present and simply is . In this latter sense we ...
... developed , and where as yet neither any subject nor object exists . And it means , in the second place , anything which is present at any stage of mental life , in so far as that is only present and simply is . In this latter sense we ...
الصفحة 99
... developed in a balanced fashion . It is use- less to try to accomplish works for which the race has no potential . Hymnology comes from the Semitic genius for " religious sentiment " ; Europeans should not waste their time writing hymns ...
... developed in a balanced fashion . It is use- less to try to accomplish works for which the race has no potential . Hymnology comes from the Semitic genius for " religious sentiment " ; Europeans should not waste their time writing hymns ...
الصفحة 101
... develop with the thought . Feeling is not , then , to be identified only with emotion , because feeling includes ... developed relations which lead it beyond itself . " Feelings can be explained as we would explain light to the blind ...
... develop with the thought . Feeling is not , then , to be identified only with emotion , because feeling includes ... developed relations which lead it beyond itself . " Feelings can be explained as we would explain light to the blind ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
aesthetic beauty belief Bradley Bradley's Bradleyan Celtic Literature classical cognitive concept concern conscious considered Dante deriving discussion drama eighteenth century elements emotion Ernest de Selincourt F. H. Bradley feeling French Critic function of literature function of poetry Goethe harmony Hulme human nature humanist ideal ideas imaginative literature important insight interpret Kenyon Review knowing L. C. Knights language Literary Criticism literary humanism Lives London Matthew Arnold Maurice de Guérin meaning metaphysics mind modern moral notion object passages perceiving perception philosophy Plato pleasure poem poet poet's poetic poetry Preface prose quoted Rambler regard rejects relation religion religious Renaissance rhetoric Romantic Romanticism Samuel Johnson seen sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's sophist position stress style Super T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot tend tendency theory things thought tion tradition unity universal view of poetry vision whole Wimsatt wisdom Wordsworth writes Yale Edition York