Poetry Direct and ObliqueChatto & Windus, 1934 - 286 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 38
Página 33
... experience will vary according to the reader's temperament . Personally I like to emphasise the commonplace ; by so ... experiences are insepar- able , that the moral value of the commonplace must depend on the moral value of the ...
... experience will vary according to the reader's temperament . Personally I like to emphasise the commonplace ; by so ... experiences are insepar- able , that the moral value of the commonplace must depend on the moral value of the ...
Página 42
... experience , from the psychic fore- ground of our most intense experiences . . . . Even the irrational raw material of the experience has nothing foreign about it - on the contrary it is the thing we have always known : passion and its ...
... experience , from the psychic fore- ground of our most intense experiences . . . . Even the irrational raw material of the experience has nothing foreign about it - on the contrary it is the thing we have always known : passion and its ...
Página 44
... experiences into account . Certainly it cannot afford to shy at the primitive in human thought . Now the great commonplaces belong to a fairly complex stage of human development . Created as they were through long experience , by ...
... experiences into account . Certainly it cannot afford to shy at the primitive in human thought . Now the great commonplaces belong to a fairly complex stage of human development . Created as they were through long experience , by ...
Contenido
Preliminary | 3 |
Preliminary | 67 |
Disguised Statement | 129 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 7 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
abstract Aeneid Aeschylus allegory allusion Blake Blake's chapter character Chaucer comedy common commonplace comparison contrast criticism D. H. Lawrence describing direct statement directness and obliquity Dryden Echoing Green effect eighteenth century English example experience expresses obliquely Falstaff feel function give Homer human idea Iliad imagination important instance kind less lines literary literature living Lycidas lyric meaning melancholy ment metaphor Miller's Tale Milton mind mythology nature never nineteenth century notion oblique expression oblique statement Odysseus Paradise Lost passage passions perfect play plot poem poet poet's poetical obliquity poetry of statement possible primal Prometheus Prometheus Bound pure reader rhetoric rhythm Romantic sense sensibility Shakespeare Shelley Shelley's significance social verse song soul stanza suggest symbolism Symbolist T. S. Eliot Tennyson things thou thought tion to-day tradition virtue W. B. Yeats whole words Yeats