American Criticism: A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the PresentRussell & Russell, 1962 - 273 psl. |
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5 psl.
... poets are not necessarily judges of poetry , Poe also holds that critics , on the contrary , are necessarily poets ; they must have , he means , ' the poetic sentiment , if not the poetic power— the " vision , " if not the " faculty ...
... poets are not necessarily judges of poetry , Poe also holds that critics , on the contrary , are necessarily poets ; they must have , he means , ' the poetic sentiment , if not the poetic power— the " vision , " if not the " faculty ...
30 psl.
... poetic principle , then , Poe defines as ' The Human Aspiration for Supernal Beauty , ' and the kind of pleasure ... poetic sentiment , but as the poetic sentiment grows , the cause surceases . Passionate grief , for instance , may lead ...
... poetic principle , then , Poe defines as ' The Human Aspiration for Supernal Beauty , ' and the kind of pleasure ... poetic sentiment , but as the poetic sentiment grows , the cause surceases . Passionate grief , for instance , may lead ...
109 psl.
... poet ( ' The poetic gift we want , but not the poetic profession ' ) , and in his essay on Shakspere he calls for a new type of man , the poet - priest , a whole man made up of these two half men who would answer all our needs . This ...
... poet ( ' The poetic gift we want , but not the poetic profession ' ) , and in his essay on Shakspere he calls for a new type of man , the poet - priest , a whole man made up of these two half men who would answer all our needs . This ...
Kiti leidimai - Peržiūrėti viską
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Visos knygos peržiūra - 1928 |
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Visos knygos peržiūra - 1928 |
American Criticism– A Study in Literary Theory from Poe to the Present Norman Foerster Trumpų ištraukų rodinys - 1956 |
Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
æsthetic American Aristotle artist assertion attain beauty Carlyle century classical Coleridge conception creative creed culture Dante democracy divine doctrine Emerson English essay ethical Europe example experience expression fact faculty faith feeling feudal genius give Goethe Greek harmony Homer human humanist idea ideal imagination impressionist inspiration intellectual intuition kind Leaves of Grass literary criticism literature living Lowell Lowell's means melancholy merely Milton mind modern moral nature naturistic never organic passage passion past perfect philosophy Philosophy of Composition Plato pleasure Plutarch Poe's poem poet poetic poetic principle poetry Preface principles prose Puritan qualities realism reality reason regarded relation religion romantic Romantic Movement romanticism sense sentiment Shakspere soul spirit supernal theory things thought tion to-day tradition Transcendental true truth ture unity universal verse virtue vision Walt Whitman Whitman whole words Wordsworth writes