Poetics: An Essay on PoetrySmith, Elder, and Company, 1852 - 294 стор. |
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Сторінка 5
... fact an unfounded opinion . But those who deny it are placed in the very awkward position of gainsaying that of which confessedly they know nothing . If you cannot understand the difference between touch and sight , you must have been ...
... fact an unfounded opinion . But those who deny it are placed in the very awkward position of gainsaying that of which confessedly they know nothing . If you cannot understand the difference between touch and sight , you must have been ...
Сторінка 7
... fact that it is imitative and truthful , the latter on the fact that it is creative or feigned . And yet how thoroughly these are accidental is herein shown , that while Plato , in his Banquet , and by the mouth of Socrates himself ...
... fact that it is imitative and truthful , the latter on the fact that it is creative or feigned . And yet how thoroughly these are accidental is herein shown , that while Plato , in his Banquet , and by the mouth of Socrates himself ...
Сторінка 10
... fact that both the dreamer and the thinker , the singer and the sayer , have declared the immediate aim of poesy to be pleasure . They are at war on many another point , but here they are at one . It is the pleasure of a truth , says ...
... fact that both the dreamer and the thinker , the singer and the sayer , have declared the immediate aim of poesy to be pleasure . They are at war on many another point , but here they are at one . It is the pleasure of a truth , says ...
Сторінка 11
... wrong , however , there is here at any rate no call for such extreme views : it is reason enough why poesy should treat of sorrow that we know so little of weal except through woe - a fact so well understood that INTRODUCTION . 11.
... wrong , however , there is here at any rate no call for such extreme views : it is reason enough why poesy should treat of sorrow that we know so little of weal except through woe - a fact so well understood that INTRODUCTION . 11.
Сторінка 12
An Essay on Poetry Eneas Sweetland Dallas. except through woe - a fact so well understood that it has passed into proverbial wit , as when Erskine wrote to Lady Payne , " He never knew pleasure who never knew pain . " Moreover , it ...
An Essay on Poetry Eneas Sweetland Dallas. except through woe - a fact so well understood that it has passed into proverbial wit , as when Erskine wrote to Lady Payne , " He never knew pleasure who never knew pain . " Moreover , it ...
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Æneid Æschylus Aristotle artist Bacon beautiful belongs Berkeley Berkeley blank verse CALIFORNIA LIBRARY called chiefly Christian classical cloth critics Divine doctrine drama dramatic art dramatist Dugald Stewart Edition endeavours English epic Euripides expression fact faculty faith Fcap former Freedom give Greek happiness HARRIET MARTINEAU heart Homer idea Illustrations imagery imagination imitative Immortality India Jane Eyre Jeremy Collier JOHN RUSKIN JOHN WILLIAM KAYE kinds of poesy language latter law of poetry less look lyrical manner means metaphor metre mind modern narrative nature never object perhaps philosopher pleasure plurality poem poet poetic feeling Post 8vo present prose reality reason regard remarkable rhyme romantic Ruskin self-consciousness sense Shakespere simile simply song Sophocles soul speak spirit stanza tell theory things thought tion true truly truth uncon unconsciousness UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA utterance vols whole words Wordsworth