Johnson, Arnold, and Eliot as Literary HumanistsRobert Mary Drum, 1965 - 458 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 21
الصفحة 22
... vision and of harmony : What bard , At the height of his vision , can deen of God , of the world , of the soul , With a plainness as near , As flashing as Moses felt When he lay in the night by his flock On the starlit Arabian waste ...
... vision and of harmony : What bard , At the height of his vision , can deen of God , of the world , of the soul , With a plainness as near , As flashing as Moses felt When he lay in the night by his flock On the starlit Arabian waste ...
الصفحة 103
... vision , and no vision of life can be complete which does not include the articulate formu lation of life which human minds make . " The philosophy in the Divine Comedy is essential to the structure of the poem , but " the poet can deal ...
... vision , and no vision of life can be complete which does not include the articulate formu lation of life which human minds make . " The philosophy in the Divine Comedy is essential to the structure of the poem , but " the poet can deal ...
الصفحة 104
... vision , seeing - Eliot uses all of these words , and it is clear that the vision of the poet is not that of the philosopher , for it was when Blake was philosophizing most , that he " did not see enough . " Eliot's essays on Herry ...
... vision , seeing - Eliot uses all of these words , and it is clear that the vision of the poet is not that of the philosopher , for it was when Blake was philosophizing most , that he " did not see enough . " Eliot's essays on Herry ...
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