The History of Literary CriticismLakshmi Narain Agarwal, 1969 - 519 من الصفحات |
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النتائج 1-3 من 68
الصفحة 111
... universal consideration " and " the universal weighs what is fit to be said or done either in likelihood or necessity . " The poet therefore imitates human beings as they may be or ought to be in such a way that the imitation is ...
... universal consideration " and " the universal weighs what is fit to be said or done either in likelihood or necessity . " The poet therefore imitates human beings as they may be or ought to be in such a way that the imitation is ...
الصفحة 117
... universal truth . His examples are not generalised or reduced to a principle or a law . While one fails to persuade us because he is abstract , the other offers examples which are of doubtful value . History , as Aristotle would have it ...
... universal truth . His examples are not generalised or reduced to a principle or a law . While one fails to persuade us because he is abstract , the other offers examples which are of doubtful value . History , as Aristotle would have it ...
الصفحة 191
... universal human experience . Nature has to be transmuted into true wit by the power of imagination . The universal or common human experience must be given a voice to express itself adequately . This is provided by imagination . Nature ...
... universal human experience . Nature has to be transmuted into true wit by the power of imagination . The universal or common human experience must be given a voice to express itself adequately . This is provided by imagination . Nature ...
المحتوى
The Beginnings | 5 |
Towards a theory of Expression | 60 |
Tendencies during the Renascence | 91 |
حقوق النشر | |
5 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
A. C. Bradley action activity aesthetic ancient appears approach argues arises Aristophanes Aristotelian Aristotle Arnold artist beauty Ben Jonson character classical Coleridge comedy concept creative critical theory criticism Croce delight diction distinction drama dramatist Dryden Eliot embodied emotion emphasised epic epic poetry Essay Euripides evokes experience expression fancy feeling function genius gives Greek hamartia harmony Hegel Homer ideal ideas images imagination imitation intuition Johnson judgment kind L. A. Reid language literary literature Longinus lyric meaning method metre mind moral neoclassical neoclassicist object observes passion philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic poetic diction poetry Pope present principle problem Quintilian reader reality reason refers rejects relation reveals rhetoric rhythm rules says sense Shakespeare Shelley Sidney soul speaks spirit style sublime symbol symbolists taste theory things thought tion tragedy true truth unity universal verse whole words Wordsworth write