The Continuity of LettersBooks for Libraries Press, 1967 - 273 стор. |
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Сторінка 6
... fact , such as ' Men have generally greater bodily strength than women ' or ' The oak lives longer than the elm ' , is not literature ; it is just science which is fact as it is in itself , untouched by imagination or emotion ...
... fact , such as ' Men have generally greater bodily strength than women ' or ' The oak lives longer than the elm ' , is not literature ; it is just science which is fact as it is in itself , untouched by imagination or emotion ...
Сторінка 24
... fact that it is a poetic jewel five cantos long will not give The Rape of the Lock a serious subject ; the fact that Keats's Nightingale is the very breath and finer spirit of romance will not make its treatment either simple or severe ...
... fact that it is a poetic jewel five cantos long will not give The Rape of the Lock a serious subject ; the fact that Keats's Nightingale is the very breath and finer spirit of romance will not make its treatment either simple or severe ...
Сторінка 118
... fact it has little of drama but Acts and Scenes and a list of dramatis personae . In one of his letters ( 11 April 1822 ) he calls Hellas ' a lyrical dramatic nondescript piece of business ' and the words are equally applicable to his ...
... fact it has little of drama but Acts and Scenes and a list of dramatis personae . In one of his letters ( 11 April 1822 ) he calls Hellas ' a lyrical dramatic nondescript piece of business ' and the words are equally applicable to his ...
Зміст
LIFE AND ART IN ENGLISH POETRY | 1 |
AN ATTEMPT AT A DEFINITION | 21 |
SHAKESPEARES HISTORIES | 52 |
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Загальні терміни та фрази
adventures Aeschylus Annette artist Barry Lyndon beauty century certainly Cervantes character Chaucer commonplace course death delight Demogorgon Dickens divine Don Quixote doubt drama dramatist earth England English English poetry eternal fact Faery Queen faith Falstaff feeling France genius give Goethe Grand Style greater greatest Greek Harper heart Henry Hephaestus hero honour human humour Iliad imagination intellectual interest Jane Austen Jupiter king knew language literature live Lord lyric Milton mind Molière Napoleon nature never noble novel once perhaps Pindar play poem poet poet's poetic poetry political Prince Prometheus prose readers Richard Richard II scarcely scene Scott seems sense Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's simplicity Sonnets soul speak speech Spenser spirit stanza story tell Thackeray Thackeray's thee thing thou thought to-day true truth universal utterance Vanity Fair verse victory whole words Wordsworth writing Zeus