Critical Approaches to LiteraturePrentice-Hall, 1956 - 404 من الصفحات Study of the methods, functions, and values of literary criticism, from the beginnings to the present day. |
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الصفحة 74
... human nature , representing its passions and humours , and the changes of fortune to which it is subject , for the delight and instruc- tion of mankind . " Here , a hundred years after Sidney , a great English poet and critic is ...
... human nature , representing its passions and humours , and the changes of fortune to which it is subject , for the delight and instruc- tion of mankind . " Here , a hundred years after Sidney , a great English poet and critic is ...
الصفحة 76
David Daiches. what we already know about human nature if at the same time the play is to instruct us in human nature , which is to say , to tell us what we did not know before . " Poetry , " wrote Keats in one of his letters , " should ...
David Daiches. what we already know about human nature if at the same time the play is to instruct us in human nature , which is to say , to tell us what we did not know before . " Poetry , " wrote Keats in one of his letters , " should ...
الصفحة 84
... human nature " so as to produce simply just generalizations about human nature , one has only to go on to read his list of reasons for praising Shakespeare to see that this does not follow ; an air of lively realism is an all ...
... human nature " so as to produce simply just generalizations about human nature , one has only to go on to read his list of reasons for praising Shakespeare to see that this does not follow ; an air of lively realism is an all ...
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achieve action argument Aristotle Aristotle's beauty Ben Jonson century characters Chaucer Cleanth Brooks Coleridge comedy concerned consider delight developed discussion Dr Johnson drama Dryden effect Eliot Elizabethan emotion English epic poetry essay example F. R. Leavis fact Faery Queen fiction function give Greek human nature I. A. Richards ideal ideas imaginative literature imitation interest knowledge language Lisideius literary criticism lively meaning Measure for Measure metaphysical poets method mind modern critics moral nature and value never novel object passions perfection persons philosophical Plato play pleasure plot poem poet poet's poetic Pope practical criticism present produced prose psychological qualities question reader relation represent Richards scene sense Shakespeare Sidney Sidney's Silent Woman social story Swinburne T. S. Eliot theory things thought tion tragedy true truth unity value of poetry verse whole words Wordsworth writer