AnglisticaRosenkilde and Bagger, 1958 |
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Página 143
... appear to many people to be not one function of poetry merely but its very essence . To them it is poetry , and the only thing worthy of the name ; while the correlative function of lending the force of reality to the imaginary will appear ...
... appear to many people to be not one function of poetry merely but its very essence . To them it is poetry , and the only thing worthy of the name ; while the correlative function of lending the force of reality to the imaginary will appear ...
Página 9
... appear in Appreciations , also belong to the year 1886. Gaston de Latour , the companion piece of Marius , appears to have been well in hand by the early half of 1888 , starting its serial publication in Macmillan's Magazine in June ...
... appear in Appreciations , also belong to the year 1886. Gaston de Latour , the companion piece of Marius , appears to have been well in hand by the early half of 1888 , starting its serial publication in Macmillan's Magazine in June ...
Página 16
... appear the greater on second reading shows a deeper appreciation of this quality on the part of the reader . And although there have been writers able to achieve this effect unconsciously or by intuition , yet the reader's pleasure is ...
... appear the greater on second reading shows a deeper appreciation of this quality on the part of the reader . And although there have been writers able to achieve this effect unconsciously or by intuition , yet the reader's pleasure is ...
Contenido
ARNOLD AND EARLY VICTORIAN POETIC THEORY | 9 |
WORDSWORTH | 31 |
BYRON | 58 |
Derechos de autor | |
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accept achievement admired appears argument for latitude Arnold's view artist asserts Bacon beauty believed Byron CALIFORNIA LIBRARY Cambridge Platonists changes character Christian classical Coleridge Coleridge's Crites Cyrenaic Cyrenaicism Descartes differences doctrine Dorothy Wordsworth Dowden drama Dryden Elizabethan England English critics expression feeling French genius Giaour Gildon Goethe Howard human Ibid ideas intellectual John John Dryden John Keats judgment Keats Keats's KEMP MALONE knowledge language latitudinarian Letters of M. A. literary criticism literature logical London Marius Marius the Epicurean matter Matthew Arnold Maurice de Guérin mind moral nature neo-classicism opinion passage passion Pater Percy Bysshe Shelley philosophy phrase poem poet poetic practice Preface present principles reader reason religion religious Restoration criticism romantic rules Rymer sense sentence seventeenth century Shelley Shelley's poetry spirit standards taste theory things third edition thought tion tolerance tragedy truth uniformitarian Victorian vols words Wordsworth Wotton writes Arnold