Rhythm and Harmony in Poetry and Music: Together with Music as a Representative Art; Two Essays in Comparative ÆstheticsG. P. Putnam's sons, 1894 - 344 páginas |
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Página iii
... developed in accordance with the simplest principles of logic and common sense , the opinions thus expressed might be entitled to grave consideration . As it is , they are very apparent utterances of superficial impressions , such as ...
... developed in accordance with the simplest principles of logic and common sense , the opinions thus expressed might be entitled to grave consideration . As it is , they are very apparent utterances of superficial impressions , such as ...
Página vii
... develop his system where theirs have ended . Once more , in " Art in Theory , " an endeavor is made to find a simple and single conception of beauty fitted to meet the requirements of those who attribute it to essentially mental results ...
... develop his system where theirs have ended . Once more , in " Art in Theory , " an endeavor is made to find a simple and single conception of beauty fitted to meet the requirements of those who attribute it to essentially mental results ...
Página xii
... . The same is true of classicism and romanticism . They cannot be differentiated till developed into a form of ex- pression . The questions before us are , what is this form , and what is there in it , as a form xii PREFACE .
... . The same is true of classicism and romanticism . They cannot be differentiated till developed into a form of ex- pression . The questions before us are , what is this form , and what is there in it , as a form xii PREFACE .
Página xv
... developed for its own sake , concerning which the reader may notice what is said in the Introduction to " Music as a Representative Art , " on page 235 . It might be supposed that the definition of art there quoted , to the effect that ...
... developed for its own sake , concerning which the reader may notice what is said in the Introduction to " Music as a Representative Art , " on page 235 . It might be supposed that the definition of art there quoted , to the effect that ...
Página xxii
... develop the form for its own sake . He has nothing else to do . But form may mean many different things . With some , it means the imitation of natural outlines or colors . With some , it hardly means imitation at all . It means the ...
... develop the form for its own sake . He has nothing else to do . But form may mean many different things . With some , it means the imitation of natural outlines or colors . With some , it hardly means imitation at all . It means the ...
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Términos y frases comunes
according Æneid æsthetic alliteration arranged Art in Theory ART-METHODS artistic assonance bass blank verse cadence cæsura cause Chapter chord color composed congruity connection consonants developed downward duration elocutionary expression fact Faerie Queene fifth Genesis of Art-Form Götterdämmerung gradation Greek harmony hexameter human voice iambic Idem imitation indicated inharmonic instance instruments length lines major major scale melody ments methods metre mind minor mood Motive movement musical scale nature notes Notice number of syllables octave Paradise Lost partial effects partial tones phrases pitch poetic poetry Poetry and Music poets principle produced quotation ratios reason recognized repetition representation Representative Art result rhyme rhythm scale sense Shakespeare singing song sounds speech stanzas strings suggested tendency termed terminal tetrameter thee thought tion tonic trimeter triple measures Trochaic unaccented syllables unity upward uttered verse vibrations voice vowels W. S. Gilbert Wagner's words